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crawl

crawl / crawl / crawl / crawl / crawl / crawl
Intransitive VerbTransitive VerbNoun
past: crawledpp: crawleding: crawling

This word evokes a sense of low-to-the-ground movement, whether literal or figurative. It suggests a lack of speed and often implies a struggle, a primitive stage of development, or a cautious approach to a destination. When applied to traffic or progress, it carries a negative connotation of frustration and inefficiency. In technical contexts, the term shifts from physical movement to systematic exploration. A web crawler does not move slowly but rather methodically, mirroring the way an insect might traverse every inch of a surface to ensure nothing is missed.

Meanings

Intransitive Verbcrawl
[~][~ forward][~ along]

To move slowly and carefully on the hands and knees.

"The baby began to crawl across the living room floor."

Intransitive Verbcrawl
[~][~ along]

To move very slowly, typically due to congestion or difficulty.

"Traffic began to crawl along the highway during the storm."

Transitive Verbcrawl
[~ something]

To move slowly and carefully over a surface or through a space.

"The insect continued to crawl up the wall."

Nouncrawl

A style of swimming in which the arms move alternately and the legs flutter.

"She won the gold medal in the 100-meter crawl."

Nouncrawl

A slow pace of movement or progress.

"The traffic was a slow crawl for three miles."

Nouncrawl

A scrolling line of text moving across a television or computer screen.

"The news crawl at the bottom of the screen provided live updates."

Related Words

Last Updated: June 18, 2026Report an Error