different between craw vs scraw
craw
English
Etymology
Akin to Middle Low German krage (“neck, collar”) (whence Danish krave and German Kragen (“collar”) and Old Dutch kraga ("neck") (whence Dutch kraag). See crag (Etymology 2).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /k???/
- Rhymes: -??
Noun
craw (plural craws)
- (archaic) The stomach of an animal.
- The crop of a bird.
Translations
Synonyms
- crop
- gullet
Derived terms
- stick in one’s craw
Verb
craw (third-person singular simple present craws, present participle crawing, simple past and past participle crawed)
- (archaic) To caw, crow.
Anagrams
- WRAC
Middle English
Noun
craw
- Alternative form of crowe
craw From the web:
- what crawfish
- what crawls
- what crawfish not to eat
- what crawfish taste like
- what crayfish eat
- what crawled up your and died
- what crawls on 4 legs in the morning
- what crawdads eat
scraw
English
Etymology
From Irish scrath (“a turf”), sgraith (“a turf, green sod”), akin to Scottish Gaelic sgrath, sgroth (“the outer skin of anything, a turf, a green sod”).
Noun
scraw (plural scraws)
- A sod of grass-grown turf from the surface of a bog or from a field.
- A turf covering the roof of a cottage beneath the thatch.
Anagrams
- Craws, craws
scraw From the web:
- what scrawny means
- scrawl meaning
- what scrawny means in spanish
- what's scrawny in french
- what scrawb mean
- scrawny what part of speech
- what does sprawl mean
- what does scrawny mean
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