Find the word definition

Crossword clues for cruse

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cruse

Cruse \Cruse\ (kr?s), n. [Akin to LG. kruus, kroos, mug, jug, jar, D. kroes, G. krause, Icel. krus, Sw. krus, Dan. kruus. Cf. Crucible, Cresset.]

  1. A cup or dish.

    Take with thee . . . a cruse of honey.
    --1 Kings xiv. 3.

  2. A bottle for holding water, oil, honey, etc.

    So David took . . . the cruse of water.
    --1 Sam. xxvi. 12.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
cruse

"small vessel for liquids," early 15c., perhaps related to Old Norse krus "pot, tankard," from a general Germanic root which is of unknown origin. Compare Middle Dutch cruese, Dutch kroes "cup, pot, mug," Middle Low German krus, Danish krus "mug, jug," German Krause "jug, mug."

Wiktionary
cruse

n. 1 A small jar used to hold liquid, such as oil or water. 2 (context heraldry English) An oil lamp or similar emblem.

WordNet
cruse

n. small jar; holds liquid (oil or water)

Wikipedia
Cruse

Cruse may refer to:

  • Cruse (name), surname (includes a list of people with this name)
  • Cruse Bereavement Care, UK charity
  • Cruse De Ocoa, small town in the Dominican Republic
  • Cruse Memorial Heliport, private heliport in Douglas County, Oregon, United States
  • The Widow's Cruse, miracle in the Biblical narrative of Elisha
Cruse (surname)

Cruse is a surname of English origin.

There are many variant spellings, including Crewes, Crewis, Crews, Cruce, Cruise, Cruize, Crus, Cruwys, De Cruce and De Cruze.

Usage examples of "cruse".

One cruse that had been sealed with the seal of the high rabbi, the Kohen Gadol, the Great Priest.

Once they were crusing down Harald Boulevard, Streetlife glanced at Phaid.

Simon Bache, Erik Cruse, Claus Schone, Richard Westrall, Spannerle, Tylman, and Robert Wendell were artisans who supplied the Duke of Lancaster with various necessities on his Prussian campaigns.

Light came from many windows as well as from flaming cruses as big as cauldrons.

Huge cruses and vivid candelabra still focused their rumination toward the Auspice as if the dominion of the gaddhi's seat were not a lie.

Huge cruses and vivid candelabra still focused their rumination toward the Auspice as if the dominion of the gaddhi’s seat were not a lie.

And all came with nimbi and aureoles and gloriae, bearing palms and harps and swords and olive crowns, in robes whereon were woven the blessed symbols of their efficacies, inkhorns, arrows, loaves, cruses, fetters, axes, trees, bridges, babes in a bathtub, shells, wallets, shears, keys, dragons, lilies, buckshot, beards, hogs, lamps, bellows, beehives, soupladles, stars, snakes, anvils, boxes of vaseline, bells, crutches, forceps, stags' horns, watertight boots, hawks, millstones, eyes on a dish, wax candles, aspergills, unicorns.

In every case I found below-decks cruses of corn-brandy, marked “aquavit,” two of which I took into the pram.

Plus perfumed sealing waxes, stationery, lover’s ink scented with attar of roses, writing kits of Spanish leather, pen-holders of white sandelwood, caskets and chests of cedar-wood, pot-pourris and bowls of flower petals, brass incense holders, crystal flacons and cruses with stoppers of cut amber, scented gloves, handkerchiefs, sewing cushions filled with mace, and musk-sprinkled wallpaper that could fill a room with scent for more than a century.

Twelve hundred pair of greaves, crossbows, breastplates, rotting boots, chewed-up harnesses, seventy bolts of stiff linen, twelve inkwells, twenty thousand torches, tallow lamps, currycombs, balls of twine, sticks of licorice wood -- the chewing gum of the fourteenth century -- sooty armorers, packs of hounds, Teutonic Knights playing drafts, harpists jugglers muteleers, gallons of barley beer, bundles of pennants, arrows, lances, and smokejacks for Simon Bache, Erik Cruse, Clause Schone, Richard Westrall, Spannerle, Tylman and Robert Wendell in the bridge-building scene, in the bridge-crossing scene, in ambush, in the pouring rain: sheaves of lightning, splintered oak trees, horses shy, owls blink, foxes track, arrows whir: the Teutonic Knights are getting nervous.

This is perhaps the natural law that Elijah, by God's aid, invoked in the miracle of the widow's cruse, and that produced the manna that fed the Israelites in the desert.