[
US
/ˈkɹɪb/
]
[ UK /kɹˈɪb/ ]
[ UK /kɹˈɪb/ ]
VERB
-
line with beams or planks
crib a construction hole - take unauthorized (intellectual material)
- use a crib, as in an exam
NOUN
- baby bed with high sides made of slats
- a bin or granary for storing grains
- the cards discarded by players at cribbage
- a card game (usually for two players) in which each player is dealt six cards and discards one or two
- a literal translation used in studying a foreign language (often used illicitly)
How To Use crib In A Sentence
- Three tall memorial archways inscribed with Chinese characters stand outside the temple.
- He described the sequence of events leading up to the robbery.
- Wine lovers in the U.S. are increasingly describing their favorite vintage as molto buono, instead of très bon.
- But Sexton found Nicks for an easy 31-yard score on fourth down with 4: 11 left to seal it, and Nicks set the receiving record with a 22-yard catch a little later from T.J. Yates, making his first appearance in relief from a broken ankle suffered in September against Virginia Tech. Newspaper Home Delivery - Subscribe Today USATODAY.com
- On the fives court, his nervous housemaster could relax, “rushing about,” as Roald described it, “shrieking what a little fool he is, and calling himself all sorts of names when he misses the ball.” Storyteller
- The company raised €10 million in May, but decided to extend the round after it was oversubscribed by potential investors.
- The report said mobile phone networks worldwide were likely to have 1.6 billion subscribers by the end of this year.
- Close beside me stood my excellent friend Griffiths, the jolly hosteler, of whom I take the present opportunity of saying a few words, though I dare say he has been frequently described before, and by far better pens. The Bible in Spain
- I'd say name it except for your second point, that named Wealden brachiosaurids are plentiful and once better material is described, some would near certainly be synonymized. ‘Angloposeidon’, the unreported story, part IV
- Nilufer Bharucha, faculty in the department of English and project coordinator, explained that the term diaspora means to be scattered or dispersed across national boundaries, and has been self-consciously used today by postcolonial theorists to describe those who got displaced from their home owing to colonial politics and post-colonial economic realities. Analysis