crab
English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /kɹæb/, enPR: krăb
Audio (US): (file) - Rhymes: -æb
Etymology 1
[edit]From Middle English crabbe, from Old English crabba (“crab; crayfish; cancer”), from Proto-West Germanic *krabbō, from Proto-Germanic *krabbô, from *krabbōną (“to creep, crawl”), from Proto-Indo-European *grobʰeh₂yéti (“scratch, claw at”), a metathesised o-grade of *gerbʰ-. More at carve.
See also Dutch krab, Low German Krabb, Danish krabbe, Swedish krabba.
Further cognates with frequentative-infix are Saterland Frisian krabbelje (“to creep, crawl”), Dutch krabbelen (“to scratch”) and German krabbeln (“to crawl”). Possibly related to English creep and Swedish krypa (“to creep, crawl”) etc.Noun
[edit]crab (countable and uncountable, plural crabs)
- A crustacean of the infraorder Brachyura, having five pairs of legs, the foremost of which are in the form of claws, and a carapace.
- (uncountable) The meat of this crustacean, served as food; crabmeat.
- 1959, Georgette Heyer, chapter 1, in The Unknown Ajax:
- But Richmond […] appeared to lose himself in his own reflections. Some pickled crab, which he had not touched, had been removed with a damson pie; and his sister saw […] that he had eaten no more than a spoonful of that either.
- A bad-tempered person.
- 1983 April 30, Sue Hyde, “Expanding Worldviews”, in Gay Community News, page 12:
- She so obviously enjoyed every second of the concert that only the most stubborn crab could not have been warmed by her charm.
- (in plural crabs, informal) An infestation of pubic lice (Pthirus pubis).
- Although crabs themselves are an easily treated inconvenience, the patient and his partner(s) clearly run major STD risks.
- (uncountable, aviation) The angle by which an aircraft's nose is pointed upwind of its groundtrack to compensate for crosswinds during an approach to landing; its crab angle.
- The pilot had to hold fifteen degrees of crab during the approach to keep her plane from getting blown off the localizer course.
- (poker slang) A playing card with the rank of three.
- (rowing) A position in rowing where the oar is pushed under the rigger by the force of the water.
- A defect in an outwardly normal object that may render it inconvenient and troublesome to use.
- 1915, W.S. Maugham, “chapter 116”, in Of Human Bondage:
- -- "I suppose you wouldn't like to do a locum for a month on the South coast? Three guineas a week with board and lodging." -- "I wouldn't mind," said Philip. -- "It's at Farnley, in Dorsetshire. Doctor South. You'd have to go down at once; his assistant has developed mumps. I believe it's a very pleasant place." There was something in the secretary's manner that puzzled Philip. It was a little doubtful. -- "What's the crab in it?" he asked.
- 1940, Horace Annesley Vachell, Little Tyrannies[1]:
- Arrested by the low price of another “desirable residence”, I asked “What's the crab?” The agent assured me that there was no crab. I fell in love with this house at sight. Happily, I discovered that it was reputed to be haunted.
- (dated) An unsold book that is returned to the publisher.
- 1844, Albert Henry Payne, Payne's universum, or pictorial world, page 99:
- […] the unsold copies may be returned to the original publisher , at a period fixed upon between Christmas and Easter; these returned copies are technically called krebse or crabs, probably, from their walking backwards. […] A says to B, "I have had eight thousand dollars' worth of your publications, three thousand were crabs, that makes five thousand."
- 1892, The Publishers Weekly, volume 41, page 709:
- […] unsold copies and settling the yearly accounts; while for the publisher begins the much dreaded season of "crabs," as […]
Derived terms
[edit]- Alaska crab, Alaska king crab, Alaskan king crab (Paralithodes spp, Lithodes aequispinus)
- anticrab
- applecrab
- arrow crab (Stenorhynchus seticornis)
- Asian blue crab
- Atlantic ghost crab
- black crab (Scylla serrata)
- black finger crab
- blue crab (Callinectes sapidus)
- blue swimmer crab (Portunus armatus)
- book-crab
- Boston crab
- box crab (Calappa spp.)
- brown box crab
- brown crab
- butterfly crab
- calling crab
- catch a crab
- chili crab
- chilli crab
- Chinese crab (Malus spp.)
- Chinese mitten crab (Eriocheir sinensis)
- Christmas Island red crab
- circular crab (Atelecyclus rotundatus)
- coconut crab (Birgus latro)
- come off crabs
- crab angle
- crabbed
- crabber
- crabbery
- crabbing
- crabbish
- crabble
- crab boil
- crab burger
- crabburger
- crabby
- crab cactus (Schlumbergera)
- crab cake
- crab canon, crab-canon
- crab-catcher
- crab claw
- crab-claw
- crabcore
- crab dolly
- crabeater
- crab-eater
- crab-eater seal
- crab-eating
- crab-eating fox
- crab-eating frog
- crab-eating macaque
- crab-eating raccoon
- crab-eating zorro
- crab face, crab-face
- crabfaced
- crab-faced
- crab-farming
- crab-favored, crab-favoured
- crabfish
- crab-fish (Cancer major)
- crab football
- crab fork
- crab-grass, crabgrass (Digitaria spp.)
- crab-harrow
- crab-hole
- crabhole
- crab-holed
- crabless
- crablet
- crab-like, crablike
- crabling
- crab-lobster
- crab Louie
- crab Louis
- crab louse, crab-louse (Pthirus pubis)
- crab market
- crabmeat
- crab meat
- crab mentality
- Crab Nebula
- crabocado
- crabologist
- crab plover
- crab-pot
- crab-pot valve
- crab puff
- crab rangoon
- crab rock
- crab-roller
- crab's claw
- crab sex
- crab's eye, crab's-eye (Abrus precatorius)
- crab-shell
- crabshell
- crab-sidle
- crab-snouted
- crab soccer
- crab spider, crab-spider (Thomisidae spp.)
- crab-step
- crab stick
- crab-stone
- crabstone
- crabwalk
- crab-weed
- crabwise
- crab yaws
- crack crab
- cut a crab
- decorator crab
- decrab
- Dolly Varden crab
- Dungeness crab (Metacarcinus magister)
- edible crab
- fast crab
- fiddler crab (Uca spp.)
- flower crab (Portunus pelagicus)
- gazami crab
- ghost crab (Ocypode)
- giant mud crab
- glass-crab
- golden crab
- green crab (Carcinus maenas)
- Halloween crab (Gecarcinus quadratus)
- hard-shell crab
- hermit crab (Paguroidea spp.)
- Hoff crab
- horse crab
- horseshoe crab (Limulus spp.)
- Iowa crab
- Japanese crab
- Jonah crab (Cancer borealis)
- king crab, king-crab (Lithodidae spp.)
- lady crab (Ovalipes ocellatus)
- land crab, land-crab (Gecarcinidae spp.)
- mangrove crab (Scylla serrata)
- mantis crab (Squilla spp.)
- masked crab (Corystes cassivelaunus)
- mole crab (Hippoidea spp.)
- mouthless crab
- mud crab
- nobody crab, no-body crab (Pycnogonidae spp.)
- oyster crab (Zaops ostreus)
- paddyfields crab
- palm crab (Birgus latro)
- Parkman crab
- pea crab, pea-crab (Pinnotheres)
- porcelain crab (Porcellanidae spp.)
- purse crab (Persephona spp.)
- purser's crabs
- pusser's crabs
- racing crab (Ocypodidae spp.)
- red crab
- reef crab
- river crab (Eriocheir sinensis)
- robber crab (Birgus latro)
- rock crab
- round crab (Atelecyclus rotundatus)
- rubble crab
- sand crab (Hippoidea spp.)
- sea crab
- sentinel crab (Macrophthalmus)
- shamefaced crab
- shame-faced crab (Calappa spp.)
- Shanghai hairy crab
- she-crab
- shellback crab
- shore crab, shore-crab (Carcinus maenas)
- sleepy crab
- snow crab
- soft-shell crab
- soldier crab, soldier-crab
- spanner crab
- spider crab, spider-crab (Majoidea spp.)
- sponge crab
- stilt crab (Palicidae spp.)
- stone crab (Menippe mercenaria et al.)
- strawberry crab (Neoliomera pubescens)
- swimming crab (Portunidae spp.)
- Tasmanian giant crab (Pseudocarcinus gigas)
- thinstripe hermit crab
- thumbnail crab (Thia scutellata)
- tree crab (Coenobita clypeatus)
- troll crab
- tuna crab
- turn out crabs
- vampire crab (Geosesarma spp.)
- velvet crab (Necora puber)
- werecrab
- white crab
- yellowline arrow crab
Translations
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Verb
[edit]crab (third-person singular simple present crabs, present participle crabbing, simple past and past participle crabbed)
- (intransitive) To fish for crabs.
- (transitive, US, slang) To ruin.
- 1916, Ring W. Lardner, “Three Kings and a Pair”, in The Saturday Evening Post[2]:
- I thought at the time that that little speech meant a savin' of eight dollars, […] But the Missus crabbed it a few minutes after her and Bess come in the room.
- 1940, Raymond Chandler, Farewell, My Lovely, Penguin, published 2010, page 224:
- ‘Just so we understand each other,’ he said after a pause. ‘If you crab this case, you'll be in a jam.’
- (intransitive) To complain.
- 1925, F[rancis] Scott Fitzgerald, chapter 7, in The Great Gatsby, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, published 1953, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 127:
- “The thing to do is to forget about the heat,” said Tom impatiently. “You make it ten times worse by crabbing about it.”
- (transitive) To complain about.
- 2007, Douglas Newton, Dr. Odin, page 24:
- Well, because of this state of things they crabbed his scheme from the first, ridiculed it, wrote against it, spread broadcast a feeling of distrust.
- (intransitive) To drift or move sideways or to leeward (by analogy with the movement of a crab).
- 2000, Dana Stabenow, Midnight Come Again, →ISBN, page 251:
- Mutt stalked forward, matching him, step for step, crabbing sideways the way wolves do when they're going for the kill.
- 2007, Pat DePaolo, The Beijing Games, →ISBN, page 454:
- The aircraft crabbed sideways in the cross-winds and leveled to horizontal.
- 2015, Andrew Swanston, Waterloo: The Bravest Man, →ISBN:
- Another shouted order and again the squares crabbed sideways.
- To move in a manner that involves keeping low and clinging to surfaces.
- 2011, Robert Vivian, The Least Cricket of Evening, page 108:
- Time slowed down then, became liquid in the aftermath of his grotesque, unfolding limbs; he crabbed his way down the faded line, rocking back and forth in braces he would use all his life.
- 2019, Ronan Frost, White Peak:
- Foot by foot, he crabbed his way down another ninety feet of rock chimney until he stood on solid ground again, still very much alive.
- (transitive, aviation) To navigate (an aircraft, e.g. a glider) sideways against an air current in order to maintain a straight-line course.
- (transitive, film, television) To move (a camera) sideways.
- 1997, Paul Kriwaczek, Documentary for the Small Screen, page 109:
- If panning is not easy to make seem natural, crabbing the camera is even less like any action we perform with our eyes in the real world. There are a few circumstances in which we walk sideways: […]
- (obsolete, World War I), to fly slightly off the straight-line course towards an enemy aircraft, as the machine guns on early aircraft did not allow firing through the propeller disk.
- (rare) To back out of something.
- 1960, P[elham] G[renville] Wodehouse, chapter XV, in Jeeves in the Offing, London: Herbert Jenkins, →OCLC:
- “Nothing can possibly go wrong.” “Just as you say, sir. But I still have that feeling.” The blood of the Woosters is hot, and I was about to tell him in set terms what I thought of his bally feeling, when I suddenly spotted what it was that was making him crab the act.
Derived terms
[edit]Etymology 2
[edit]From Middle English crabbe (“wild apple”), of Germanic origin, plausibly from North Germanic, cognate with Swedish dialect scrabba.
Noun
[edit]crab (plural crabs)
- The crab apple or wild apple.
- 1610–1611 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tempest”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act II, scene ii]:
- I prithee, let me bring thee where crabs grow;
And I with my long nails will dig thee pig-nuts;
- 1895, Robert Blatchford, “The New Party in the North”, in Andrew Reid, editor, The New Party Described by Some of its Members[3], London: Hodder Brothers, page 24:
- Just as by cultivation the acrid wild crab has been developed into the beautiful and luscious apple, may the unripe, ill-fed, neglected wild fruits of the fields and slums be developed into pure and noble and beautiful men and women.
- The tree bearing crab apples, which has a dogbane-like bitter bark with medical use.
- A cudgel made of the wood of the crab tree; a crabstick.
- 1741, David Garrick, The Lying Valet:
- She swore to such things , that I could do nothing but swear and call names : upon which out bolts her husband upon me , with a fine taper crab in his hand and fell upon me with such violence , that , being half delirious , I made a full confession
- A movable winch or windlass with powerful gearing, used with derricks, etc.
- A form of windlass, or geared capstan, for hauling ships into dock, etc.
- A machine used in ropewalks to stretch the yarn.
- A claw for anchoring a portable machine.
Synonyms
[edit]- (crab apple): crab apple
- (tree): crab apple
Derived terms
[edit]Verb
[edit]crab (third-person singular simple present crabs, present participle crabbing, simple past and past participle crabbed)
- (obsolete) To irritate, make surly or sour
- To be ill-tempered; to complain or find fault.
- (British dialect) To cudgel or beat, as with a crabstick
- 1639, John Fletcher, Monsieur Thomas:
- Get you to bed, drab, courage Or l'll so crab your shoulders!
- 1935, Jack Molyneux, John Fairfax-Blakeborough, Thirty Years a Hunt Servant: Being the Memories of Jack Molyneux, page 161:
- I was on a horse named The Skipper, a perfect terror to ride when he was in a bad humour, which he invariably was; nevertheless he was a splendid hunter and I never crabbed him.
- 2021, H. De Vere Stacpoole, Vanderdecken:
- The Shiremans had a down on him over stores he'd condemned as not fit for dogs, let alone able seamen, and they'd got wind he was a socialist, and they crabbed him all over the shipping companies' offices.
Derived terms
[edit]Etymology 3
[edit]Possibly a corruption of the genus name Carapa
Noun
[edit]crab (plural crabs)
- The tree species Carapa guianensis, native to South America.
Derived terms
[edit]Etymology 4
[edit]From carabiner.
Noun
[edit]crab (plural crabs)
Further reading
[edit]- “crab”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
- crab on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Weisenberg, Michael (2000) The Official Dictionary of Poker. MGI/Mike Caro University. →ISBN
- Funk & Wagnalls Standard Dictionary of the English Language. International Edition. combined with Britannica World Language Dictionary. Chicago-London etc., Encyclopaedia Britannica, inc., 1965.
Anagrams
[edit]Middle English
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]Inherited from Old English crabba.
Noun
[edit]crab
- Alternative form of crabbe (“crab”)
Etymology 2
[edit]Of Germanic origin, plausibly from North Germanic.
Noun
[edit]crab
- Alternative form of crabbe (“crabapple”)
Romanian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]crab m (plural crabi)
Declension
[edit]singular | plural | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | ||
nominative-accusative | crab | crabul | crabi | crabii | |
genitive-dative | crab | crabului | crabi | crabilor | |
vocative | crabule | crabilor |
See also
[edit]- English 1-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:English/æb
- Rhymes:English/æb/1 syllable
- English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *gerbʰ-
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms inherited from Old English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English terms inherited from Proto-West Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-West Germanic
- English terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English uncountable nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with quotations
- English informal terms
- English terms with usage examples
- en:Aviation
- en:Poker
- en:Rowing
- English dated terms
- English verbs
- English intransitive verbs
- English transitive verbs
- American English
- English slang
- en:Film
- en:Television
- English terms with obsolete senses
- English terms with rare senses
- English terms derived from Germanic languages
- English terms derived from North Germanic languages
- English short forms
- en:Decapods
- en:Meats
- en:Seafood
- en:People
- en:Infestations
- en:Pome fruits
- en:Sapindales order plants
- Middle English terms inherited from Old English
- Middle English terms derived from Old English
- Middle English lemmas
- Middle English nouns
- Middle English terms derived from Germanic languages
- Middle English terms derived from North Germanic languages
- Romanian terms borrowed from French
- Romanian terms derived from French
- Romanian lemmas
- Romanian nouns
- Romanian countable nouns
- Romanian masculine nouns
- ro:Decapods