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I am trying to figure this out, but the only source I got did not make sense. If this does exist in the roman language anyway.

2006-09-13 20:25:31 · 2 answers · asked by Souldriven 1 in Society & Culture Languages

2 answers

That is not a prefix in Classical Latin. I do not believe that it is very common, as even this source from Wikipedia (under Cro-Magnon) uses the word "presumably":

Cro is presumably a dialectal form of creux, meaning "cavity" or "hollow"; such forms as crau, cro, crouè are found in French dialects, and all probably derive, through Vulgar Latin *crosus (not attested), from a Celtic root.

2006-09-13 22:56:37 · answer #1 · answered by Jeannie 7 · 1 0

It might be African American slang. Could stand for crowbar. Somewhat like a whore is sometimes referred to as a ho.

2006-09-13 20:33:35 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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