different between knuckerhole vs knucker
knuckerhole
English
Etymology
knucker +? hole
Noun
knuckerhole (plural knuckerholes)
- In English folklore, a hole in the ground said to be the home of a knucker, a dragon-like creature.
- 2011, James Edward Gilmer, 100 Year Cover-Up Revealed: We Lived with Dinosaurs!, page 67:
- There is a knuckerhole north of Lyminster where a nicor is said to have lived. As a matter of fact, the warrior who slew the knuckerhole dinosaur was honored with a tombstone that is still located in a church there dedicated to St. Mary Magdalene.
- 2011, James Edward Gilmer, 100 Year Cover-Up Revealed: We Lived with Dinosaurs!, page 67:
knuckerhole From the web:
knucker
English
Etymology
From Old English nicor (“water monster; hippopotamus”).
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -?k?(?)
Noun
knucker (plural knuckers)
- (Britain, dialect) A kind of water dragon, said to live in knuckerholes in Sussex, England.
Further reading
- knucker on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
knucker From the web:
- what meaning knucker
- what does a knucker mean
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