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crotch

noun

  1. the bottom of the pelvis, the region of the body where the legs join the torso, and is often considered to include the groin and genitals
L31097 on Wikidata ↗

verb

No English definition recorded for this entry.

L31098 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /kɹɑt͡ʃ/ / /kɹɒt͡ʃ/

noun

Etymology: Of disputed origin; two possibilities seem likely: * From Middle English croche, variant of crucche (“crutch”); compare crook. * From Middle English croche, variant of crouche (“cross, crozier”).

  1. The ventral area (very bottom) of the human body between where the legs fork from the torso, in the area of the genitals and anus.

    Every mile they rode their crotches felt worse saddlepain.

    We were turned at a slight angle to each other, our shoulders touching and I put my hand on his crotch. Miles seemed to be expecting it. He chuckled, took a pair of compasses and jammed them into the door above the latch. This was called ‘sporting the oak’ and was the recognized way of locking oneself in. Over the next eighteen months we sported our oaks with great frequency.

  2. Either the male or female genitalia.

    He cringed at being kicked in the crotch.

  3. The area where something forks or branches: where a ramification takes place.

    There is a child sitting in a crotch of that tree.

    In one crotch of the old peach-tree, just by the wall, sat a second cousin of the little eight-eyed fellow we had left up stairs, with her web spread on the most geometric model, and a young and promising family of spiders and spideresses practising gymnastics in the fairy rigging; […]

  4. In the three-ball carom game, a small space at each corner of the table.
  5. The open counter (negative space) formed by two downward strokes that meet at an internal acute angle, potentially above a vertex, as in the letters "V" and "Y".

verb

Etymology: Of disputed origin; two possibilities seem likely: * From Middle English croche, variant of crucche (“crutch”); compare crook. * From Middle English croche, variant of crouche (“cross, crozier”).

  1. To provide with a crotch; to give the form of a crotch to.

    to crotch the ends of ropes in splicing or tying knots

  2. To notch (a log) on opposite sides to provide a grip for the dogs that will haul it.
  3. To shoplift or smuggle by hiding between one's thighs or in one's underwear.

    I remember crotching a bottle of Corona out of a pub on Commercial Drive and nursing it with Cancer as we stumbled towards my car .

    I crotched them. I put them in my underwear.

  4. To hit in the crotch (genital region).

    Flair and Paisley flirted until Daffney crotched David from behind with a baseball bat.

    Pillman gets crotched on the top rope and barely kicks out of a superplex.

  5. To secure (the boom) to the boom crotch (a forked pole).

    […] when she begins to go astern, let go the anchor, brail up the spanker, crotch the boom, haul taut the guys, light-to the cable, as fast as she will take it, until a sufficient scope is out, when stopper.

    I always crotched the boom while reefing, and made an easy job of it, the boat, in the meantime, taking perfect care of herself on any point of sailing, under jib and jigger.

  6. To hang (a rope) over a crotch in a tree so that the ends hang down from opposite sides.

    The safety sling should be tied immediately after the climber has crotched his rope as high and as close to the trunk as possible.

    If it is necessary, however, to climb directly onto the limb where the rope is crotched, the limb may be approached as shown in Figure 32.

  7. To remove overgrown wool from around the eyes of.

    Cattle and sheep purchased by contract for a specific consignee at point of origin, and moving on through billing to points beyond Denver, may be stopped at Denver to be weighed, classified, sorted, inspected, delivered, tagged, faced, crotched, and/or diverted for a charge of $7.50 per car or per truck in lieu of yardage.

    My father crotched the ewes before they gave birth, and then played midwife to entire flocks once they started lambing in late April, often with the help of Rusyn peasants who knew just when to show up every year and who seemed fond of my tall, independent father.