crewel
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkɹuː.əl/, /ˈkɹuːl/
- Rhymes: -uːəl, -uːl
- Homophone: cruel
Noun
crewel (countable and uncountable, plural crewels)
- Worsted yarn, slackly twisted, used for embroidery.
- 1653, Iz[aak] Wa[lton], The Compleat Angler or The Contemplative Man’s Recreation. Being a Discourse of Fish and Fishing, […], London: […] T. Maxey for Rich[ard] Marriot, […], →OCLC; reprinted as The Compleat Angler (Homo Ludens; 6), Nieuwkoop, South Holland, Netherlands: Miland Publishers, 1969, →ISBN:
- First for a May-fly: you may make his body with greenish colored crewel or willowish color
Translations
worsted yarn, slackly twisted, used for embroidery
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Verb
crewel (third-person singular simple present crewels, present participle crewelling or (US) creweling, simple past and past participle crewelled or (US) creweled)
- (transitive) To make (embroidery) using the crewel method.
Middle English
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