different between partridge vs cro

partridge

English

Etymology

From Middle English partrich, partriche, pertriche, perdriz, from Old French perdriz, partriz, from Latin perd?x (partridge), from Ancient Greek ?????? (pérdix, partridge), probably from ???????? (pérdomai, to fart).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?p??t??d??/
  • (US) enPR: pär?tr?j, IPA(key): /?p??t??d??/

Noun

partridge (plural partridges or partridge)

  1. (ornithology) Any bird of a number of genera in the family Phasianidae, notably in the genera Perdix and Alectoris.
  2. (obsolete, military) A type cannon charge composed of several missiles fired all together, similar to langrage or case-shot. Also a large cannon that shoots stones.

Derived terms

Translations

Further reading

  • partridge on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

partridge From the web:

  • what partridge eat
  • what partridge family member died
  • partridge meaning
  • what's partridge in french
  • what's partridge in italian
  • what partridge called in hindi
  • what's partridge in farsi
  • what's partridge in persian


cro

Manx

Etymology

From Old Irish cnó, from Proto-Celtic *kn?s (compare Welsh cnau (nuts)), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *knew-.

Noun

cro m (genitive singular cro, plural croiyn)

  1. nut

Derived terms

Mutation


Norman

Etymology

Borrowed from Old Norse krókr (hook).

Noun

cro m (plural crocs)

  1. (Jersey) hook
  2. (Jersey) fishhook

Synonyms

  • (fishhook): ain

Derived terms

  • cro d'la tchulasse (hook for rear harness)

cro From the web:

  • what crops are typically genetically modified
  • what crohn's disease
  • what crops did the mayans grow
  • what crochet hook to use
  • what crops are grown in california
  • what crops are grown in texas
  • what crops grow in the winter
  • what crosses over in meiosis
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