crawl
1 (krôl)
[Middle English craulen, from Old Norse krafla.]
intransitive verb: crawled, crawl·ing, crawls.
- To move slowly on the hands and knees or by dragging the body along the ground; creep.
- To advance slowly, feebly, laboriously, or with frequent stops: We crawled along until we reached the open road.
- To proceed or act servilely.
- To be or feel as if swarming or covered with moving things: The accident scene was crawling with police officers. My flesh crawled in horror. See synonyms at teem1
- To swim the crawl.
noun
- The action of moving slowly on the hands or knees or dragging the body along the ground.
- An extremely slow pace: Traffic was moving at a crawl.
- Sports A rapid swimming stroke consisting of alternating overarm strokes and a flutter kick.
- A set of letters or figures that move across, up, or down a movie or television screen, usually giving information, such as film credits or weather alerts.
derivatives
- crawĺing·ly
- adverb
crawl
2 (krôl)
[Afrikaans kraal, enclosure for animals; see kraal.]
noun
- A pen in shallow water, as for confining fish or turtles.