different between crosse vs crosst

crosse

English

Etymology

From French crosse (stick).

Noun

crosse (plural crosses)

  1. A lacrosse stick.

Usage notes

Rarely used outside of the game's rulebooks; "stick" is preferred during practice and gameplay.

Translations

Anagrams

  • Croses, Secors, Sorces, cessor, corses, orcess, scores, scorse

French

Etymology

From Middle French crosse, from Old French crosse (shepherd's staff), from a Germanic language, likely Frankish *krukkija, ultimately from Proto-Germanic *krukj? (staff, crutch). Compare Old High German krucka, Old Saxon krukka, Middle Dutch crucke, English crutch.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /k??s/

Noun

crosse f (plural crosses)

  1. butt (of rifle etc.)
  2. stick
  3. crosier
  4. (France, sports) hockey stick, lacrosse stick, or golf club
  5. lacrosse
    Synonym: lacrosse
  6. (Canada, uncountable, informal) fraud, a swindle (usually as de la crosse)

Derived terms

  • crosse de fougère

Descendants

  • ? Portuguese: crossa

Further reading

  • “crosse” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

Anagrams

  • corses
  • scores

Walloon

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /k??s/

Etymology 1

From Latin crusta.

Noun

crosse f (plural crosses)

  1. crust (outer layer of bread and pastry).
Derived terms
  • pice-crosse
  • cache-ås-crosses

Etymology 2

From Frankish *krukkja.

Noun

crosse f (plural crosses)

  1. crook, crosier.
  2. crutch.
  3. butt.
Derived terms
  • crossete
  • crossî

crosse From the web:

  • what crosses over in meiosis
  • what crosses the blood brain barrier
  • what crosses the placenta
  • what crosses the cell membrane
  • what crosses africa
  • what crosses the synapse
  • what crosses at the optic chiasm
  • what crosses through asia


crosst

English

Etymology

cross +? -t

Verb

crosst

  1. (archaic) simple past tense and past participle of cross

Anagrams

  • crosts

crosst From the web:

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