See also: <span class="searchmatch">Crider</span> <span class="searchmatch">crider</span> (Puter) alternative form of cridar (“to call”)...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">crider</span> (This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.) <span class="searchmatch">Crider</span> A surname. A soil series...
rhaphidophorid camel cricket, spider cricket, camelback cricket, sand treader <span class="searchmatch">crider</span>, spricket, land shrimp (informal) (cricket in Paphidophoridae): cave weta...
one or more Romance descendants of Vulgar Latin *crītāre (cf. Old French <span class="searchmatch">crider</span> in particular). First attested in the late 11th century. crīdō (present...
Vulgar Latin *crītāre. IPA(key): /kɾiˈdaɾ/ cridar to shout Occitan: cridar <span class="searchmatch">crider</span> (Puter) Inherited from Vulgar Latin *crītāre. cridar (Rumantsch Grischun...
Don't be hurrisome or you'll pay for it with a broken head. 2013, Eric Gene <span class="searchmatch">Crider</span>, Wisp: Although the brisket was excellent, Elbert seemed a tad hurrisome...
it to the judge (idiomatic) I do not believe what you said. 2012, Bill <span class="searchmatch">Crider</span>, Murder of a Beauty Shop Queen: A Dan Rhodes Mystery, page 162: Al slid...
crie, criȝe, cry, crye, cryen criþe (either reflects early Old French <span class="searchmatch">crider</span> or a scribal error) Borrowed from Old French crier, from Vulgar Latin *crītāre;...
from Vulgar Latin *crītāre. crier (gerund criethie) (Jersey) to shout <span class="searchmatch">crider</span> (Alexis, 11th c.) crïer (alt. modern spelling) Inherited from Vulgar Latin...
‘I looked up to him, you know. I put him on a pedal stool.’ 1996, Bill <span class="searchmatch">Crider</span>, A Dangerous Thing, page 52: They retire and get put up on a pedal-stool...