creeping
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English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]From Middle English crepynge, crepinde, crepende, crepande, from Old English crēopende, from Proto-Germanic *kreupandz, present participle of Proto-Germanic *kreupaną (“to creep, crawl”), equivalent to creep + -ing.
Verb
[edit]creeping
- present participle and gerund of creep
- 2022 January 12, Nigel Harris, “Comment: Unhappy start to 2022”, in RAIL, number 948, page 3:
- Then, in January, a creeping tsunami of train cancellations, triggered by major staff absences as a result of the aggressive transmissibility of Omicron, heaped further misery on rail users.
Etymology 2
[edit]From Middle English creping, crepynge, from Old English crēopung, equivalent to creep + -ing.
Noun
[edit]creeping (plural creepings)
- The act of something that creeps.
- 1824, Timothy Dwight, Theology, Explained and Defended in a Series of Sermons:
- It is indubitably certain, therefore, that he is able to attend, and actually attends, to all things at the same moment; to the motions of a seed, or a leaf, or an atom; to the creepings of a worm, the flutterings of an insect, and the journeys of a mite […]
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- Rhymes:English/iːpɪŋ
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- English terms inherited from Middle English
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- English terms derived from Old English
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