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crotchet

noun

No English definition recorded for this entry.

L318907 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˈkɹɑt͡ʃ.ɪt/ / /ˈkɹɒtʃ.ɪt/

noun

Etymology: From Middle English crochet, from Old French crochet (“small hook”), from croc + -et (diminutive suffix), from Old Norse krókr (“hook”). The musical note was named so because of a small hook on its stem in black notation (in modern notation this hook is on the quaver/eighth note). Doublet of crochet, crocket, and croquet.

  1. A musical note one beat long in 4/4 time.

    The crotchets and quavers are dancing up and down the stave like little black boys on a fence.

  2. A sharp curve or crook; a shape resembling a hook
  3. A hook-shaped instrument, especially as used in obstetric surgery.

    Either Doctor Denman or an old Woman would have waited—but since the horrid death-doing Crotchet has been found out, & its use permitted—Oh! many & many a Life has been flung away.

  4. A whim or a fancy.

    Thou who walkest in a vain shew, looking out with ornamental dilettante sniff and serene supremacy at all Life and all Death; and amblest jauntily; perking up thy poor talk into crotchets, thy poor conduct into fatuous somnambulisms; [...] dost thou call that "liberty!"

    He ruined himself and all that trusted in him by crotchets that he could never explain to any rational man.

  5. A forked support; a crotch.

    Their little Shed, ſcarce large enough for Two, / Seems, from the Ground increas'd, in Height and Bulk to grow. / A ſtately Temple ſhoots within the Skies, / The Crotchets of their Cot in Columns riſe: [...]

  6. An indentation in the glacis of the covered way, at a point where a traverse is placed.
  7. The arrangement of a body of troops, either forward or rearward, so as to form a line nearly perpendicular to the general line of battle.
  8. A square bracket.

verb

Etymology: From Middle English crochet, from Old French crochet (“small hook”), from croc + -et (diminutive suffix), from Old Norse krókr (“hook”). The musical note was named so because of a small hook on its stem in black notation (in modern notation this hook is on the quaver/eighth note). Doublet of crochet, crocket, and croquet.

  1. to play music in measured time

    The nimblest crotcheting musician

  2. Archaic form of crochet (“knit by looping”).
crotchet — meaning, definition (noun) · Vinony