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DAVIT |
Crane |
|
DERRICK |
Crane |
|
WINCH |
Crane |
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HOIST |
Crane |
|
|
BROLGA |
Native crane |
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CRANED |
Of Crane |
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CRANING |
Of Crane |
|
WADER |
Heron, crane, e.g. |
|
|
CRAN |
Alt. of Crane |
|
UKRAINE |
Russia’s neighbour calls you ‘Crane’ |
|
CRUNKLE |
To cry like a crane. |
|
TRAVELER |
A traveling crane. See under Crane. |
|
MAST |
The vertical post of a derrick or crane. |
|
COOLUNG |
The great gray crane of India (Grus cinerea). |
|
TEAGLE |
A hoisting apparatus; an elevator; a crane; a lift. |
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CRANAGE |
The money or price paid for the use of a crane. |
|
GAUNTRY |
A scaffolding or frame carrying a crane or other
structure. |
|
CULTIROSTRES |
A tribe of wading birds including the stork,
heron, crane, etc. |
|
JIB |
The projecting arm of a crane, from which the load is
suspended. |
|
GERANINE |
A valuable astringent obtained from the root of the
Geranium maculatum or crane's-bill. |
|
UGANDA |
What African country’s flag has black, yellow and red stripes with a crane in the centre? |
|
CRANE |
To stretch, as a crane stretches its neck; as, to crane
the neck disdainfully. |
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GIBBET |
The projecting arm of a crane, from which the load is
suspended; the jib. |
|
MOULINET |
The drum upon which the rope is wound in a capstan,
crane, or the like. |
|
CRANE'S-BILL |
The geranium; -- so named from the long axis of the
fruit, which resembles the beak of a crane. |