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crocket
[ krok-it ]
noun
- a medieval ornament, usually in the form of a leaf that curves up and away from the supporting surface and returns partially upon itself.
crocket
/ ˈkrɒkɪt /
noun
- a carved ornament in the form of a curled leaf or cusp, used in Gothic architecture Also calledcrochet
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of crocket1
Example Sentences
He also denounced Imran Khan, a crocket star turned Islamist politician, saying that as opposition leader, he was the “mastermind of the violent attacks on military installations.”
When he’s drawing Spanish churches in 1962, for instance, he articulates every last crocket and cranny of the Sagrada Familia spires, every possible zigzag of mortar in his arresting facade to the Barcelona Cathedral.
With its towers and battlements, crockets and pointy arches, it looks like a demented castle — a castle with an 83,000-seat football stadium inside.
After 1300 the structure of stone buildings began to be overlaid with ornament, the window tracery and vault ribs were of intricate patterns, the pinnacles and spires loaded with crocket and ornament.
In the Decorated period they are often enriched with panelling and crockets.
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