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crowbar
[ kroh-bahr ]
noun
- Also called crow. a steel bar, usually flattened and slightly bent at one or both ends, used as a lever.
verb (used with object)
- to pry open, loosen, etc., with a crowbar:
We had to crowbar a window to get in.
crowbar
/ ˈkrəʊˌbɑː /
noun
- a heavy iron lever with one pointed end, and one forged into a wedge shape
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
“He wants to put a crowbar in the spokes of our wheels within a nanosecond,” Newsom said.
The man is seen holding up an assault weapon and what appears to be a yellow metal crowbar with his other hand.
The thieves are then seen using a crowbar to force open the glass door before entering the store and then chaining the machine to the car to pull it out.
Investigations found Reed's DNA on items around the victim's home, including on a black crowbar and two blue disposable gloves containing the victim's blood.
They are often are slinging sledgehammers and crowbars “in a sauna-like environment,” said Fabian Plascencia, of the Northern District Council of Laborers Local 67.
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