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crowbar
[ kroh-bahr ]
noun
- Also called crow. a steel bar, usually flattened and slightly bent at one or both ends, used as a lever.
verb (used with object)
- to pry open, loosen, etc., with a crowbar:
We had to crowbar a window to get in.
crowbar
/ ˈəʊˌɑː /
noun
- a heavy iron lever with one pointed end, and one forged into a wedge shape
51Թ History and Origins
Example Sentences
With a crowbar I could have reached down and touched them, felt the pulse of the world’s information traveling through my fingertips.
Just one month before the shooting, the Ahearne brothers and Kelly stood outside the Museum of Far Eastern Art in Geneva equipped with a sledgehammer, angle grinders and crowbars.
Footage previously played to the jury showed two vehicles driving across the Great Courtyard, before hooded individuals armed with sledgehammers and a large crowbar broke into the palace.
Marks that look like they were made with a screwdriver or crowbar were left behind.
“He wants to put a crowbar in the spokes of our wheels within a nanosecond,” Newsom said.
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