cruet nounEtymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French, diminutive of Old French
crue, of Germanic origin; akin to Middle High German krūche
pitcher — more at crockDate: 14th century 1. a vessel
to hold wine or water for the Eucharist 2. a usually glass bottle
used to hold a condiment (as oil or vinegar) for use at the table
cruet n. 1 a small container for salt, pepper, oil, or vinegar for use at table. 2 (in full cruet-stand) a stand holding cruets. 3 Eccl. a small container for the wine and water in the
celebration of the Eucharist. Etymology: ME through AF f. OF crue pot f. OS kruka: rel. to CROCK(2)
cruet
(cruets)
1. A cruet is a small container, or set of containers, for salt, pepper, or mustard
which is used at meals. (BRIT)
...a cruet set.N-COUNT
2. A cruet is a small glass bottle that contains oil or vinegar and is used at the
table at meals. (AM)
N-COUNT
cruet
ˈkru:ɪt n. 1 a small container for salt, pepper, oil, or vinegar for
use at table. 2 (in full cruet-stand) a stand holding cruets. 3 Eccl. a small
container for the wine and water in the celebration of the Eucharist. [ME
through AF f. OF crue pot f. OS kruka: rel. to CROCK(2)]
Cruet \Cru"et\, n. [Anglo-French cruet, a dim. from OF. crue,
cruie; of German or Celtic origin, and akin to E. crock an
earthen vessel.]
1. A bottle or vessel; esp., a vial or small glass bottle for
holding vinegar, oil, pepper, or the like, for the table;
a caster. --Swift.
2. (Eccl.) A vessel used to hold wine, oil, or water for the
service of the altar.
Cruet stand, a frame for holding cruets; a caster.
On most web browsers you can double click any word on this page to see what definitions I have for that word.
This dictionary server is not an authoratative source of information for anything. Like almost everything at sorabji.com, I set this up for my own purposes. In this case the purpose is to
browse words and ideas at random. An automatically generated page that produces Random Words
is my gateway to this resource. Below is a list of some of my favorite words discovered here. I also have attempted a word of the day type of thing,
in which I simply post interesting words that I find through the Wordswarm Random Words Pages. I have made available the complete 1828 Webster's Dictionary, which many feel is the greatest English dictionary ever published.
Other random links of mine include the Sorabji.com Random Link, which sends you to one of
over 7,000 pages on my web sites; the Face Server produces random images of
human faces; clicking the Random WAYD link shows you a random posting to my "What Are You Doing?" board; the Random USPS
Mailbox link sends you to a page with information about a random mailbox; and the random pictures page page of sorabji.com shows one of over 11,000 random images any time you load the page. On an unrelated note, I have begun making several thousand pages of legal documents searchable.