croft
Meanings
noun
- An enclosed piece of land, usually small and arable and used for small-scale food production, and often with a dwelling next to it; in particular, such a piece of land rented to a farmer (a crofter), especially in Scotland, together with a right to use separate pastureland shared by other crofters.
verb
- To do agricultural work on one or more crofts.
- To place (cloth, etc.) on the ground in the open air in order to sun and bleach it.
noun
- An underground chamber; a crypt, an undercroft.
- A cave or cavern.
noun
- A carafe.
name
- A surname from Middle English, from the common noun croft, and from places named Croft.
- A place in England:
- A village and civil parish in Warrington borough, Cheshire (OS grid ref SJ6393).
- A small village in Croft and Yarpole parish, Herefordshire (OS grid ref SO4565).
- A village and civil parish in Blaby district, Leicestershire (OS grid ref SP5195).
- A village and civil parish in East Lindsey district, Lincolnshire (OS grid ref TF5061).
- An unincorporated community in Pratt County, Kansas, United States.
Pronunciation
Word forms
Etymology
The noun is derived from Middle English croft, crofft, croffte, croofte, crofte (“croft”), from Old English croft (“enclosed field”); further etymology uncertain, but possibly from Proto-Germanic *kruftaz (“a hill; a curve”), from Proto-Indo-European *grewb- (“to bend; arch, crook, curve”); see also crop. The English word is cognate with Middle Dutch kroft, krocht, crocht (“high and dry land; a field on the downs”), Middle Low German kroch (“enclosed piece of farmland or pasture”), Scots croft, craft (“croft”). The verb is derived from the noun.
Synonyms
Related words
Derived words
Previous
This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.