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croze
[ krohz ]
noun
- the groove at either end of the staves of a barrel, cask, etc., into which the edge of the head fits.
- a tool used by a cooper for cutting such a groove.
croze
/ krəʊz /
noun
- the recess cut at the end of a barrel or cask to receive the head
- a tool for cutting this recess
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of croze1
Example Sentences
Then, he attached the staves to the floor by creating a “croze” groove in each.
We can assume that they would treat her similarly to how they treated the anthropologist who lived with them for a while, Professor Croze.
In this Oscar-nominated drama from Julian Schnabel, Mr. Bauby is played by Mathieu Amalric; Marie-Josée Croze is a speech therapist who teaches him to use his left eyelid to communicate.
Over their meetings presided Pierre Daudé, a clerk in the Exchequer; round that doyen gathered the traveller Misson, Rapin Thoyras, then planning his History of Great Britain, Newton's friend, Le Moivre, and a Fellow of the Royal Society, Cornand La Croze, a contributor to Le Clerc's Bibliothèque universelle.
Croze, krōz, n. the groove in the staves of a cask in which the edge of the head is set.
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