Cradling vs Crabling - What's the difference?
cradling | crabling |
The act by which one cradles a child etc.
* 1967 , Stuart A. Altmann, Social communication among primates
The act of using a cradle (the tool).
(coopering) The cutting of a cask into two pieces lengthwise, to enable it to pass a narrow place, the two parts being afterwards united and rehooped.
(carpentry) The framework in arched or coved ceilings to which the laths are nailed.
A small, young, or baby crab.
*1867 , William Barry Lord, Crab, shrimp, and lobster lore :
*2009 , R. Y. Gheith, The Complete Isaac Trilogy :
As nouns the difference between cradling and crabling
is that cradling is the act by which one cradles a child etc while crabling is a small, young, or baby crab.As a verb cradling
is present participle of cradle.cradling
English
Verb
(head)- The woman was cradling the baby in the crook of her arm as she fed it.
Noun
(en noun)- About four thousand cradlings were observed among five mother-infant pairs during the first 15 weeks of each infant's life.
- (Knight)
crabling
English
Noun
(en noun)- The juvenile members of most of our seaside communities are much given to crab-fishing, and may be seen from early morn to evening late, dangling their legs over some convenient rock, sea-wall, or landing-steps, and with a piece of twine to which a dainty morsel of fish offal has been tied, doing their best to induce some greedy young crabling to grasp it with his nippers, [...]
- This was, after all, the easiest kind of life a simple-minded crabling' such as he could hope to achieve, and so Galoo's words did well to play upon his fears. the sea-swindler went on to say, giving the ' crabling a slight push to go.