What's the difference between cranny and furrow?

Cranny


Definition:

  • (n.) A small, narrow opening, fissure, crevice, or chink, as in a wall, or other substance.
  • (n.) A tool for forming the necks of bottles, etc.
  • (v. i.) To crack into, or become full of, crannies.
  • (v. i.) To haunt, or enter by, crannies.
  • (a.) Quick; giddy; thoughtless.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) ForzaVista is back, but it's been hugely expanded allowing players to poke around every nook and cranny of every car in the game.
  • (2) And we will extend this principle of transparency to every nook and cranny of politics and public life, because it's one of the quickest and easiest ways to transfer power to the powerless and prevent waste, exploitation and abuse.
  • (3) "He is very seized by the need to leverage legacy from every nook and cranny of the project.
  • (4) Hidden in nooks, crannies and side-roads of the City of Angels, there are, contrary to popular perception, numerous family-run guesthouses, intimate boutique hotels and even quirky little B&BS.
  • (5) The release this week of several detailed files on Hobsbawm and Hill is a reminder of just how deeply the cold war penetrated into every nook and cranny of British academic life.
  • (6) Adults £85 per day, children (aged 13-17) £60 per day, overnight kayak camping expeditions an additional £15 per person per night Eilean Donan, Dornie Photograph: Alamy Clamber around the ramparts and explore the dimly lit nooks and crannies of one of the most romantic castles in Scotland.
  • (7) Bright affectionately remembers all the "nooks and crannies" of the 1820s house, but has no regrets about the move.
  • (8) It seems every valley and flatland, each nook and cranny, has been turned into a plot for some sort of crop.
  • (9) We’d scour the red sandstone nooks and limestone crannies to find them.
  • (10) Her hair is windblown, her black coat is flapping and her piercing gaze finds a problem in every nook and cranny.
  • (11) It now teeters over the favela like a Gaudí castle, full of stairways and corridors and hidden nooks and crannies, with panoramic views over Guanabara Bay from its ample terraces.
  • (12) There was a surreal atmosphere, with tents glowing in the dark, and the noise of insect life coming from every nook and cranny.
  • (13) Since founding her company in 1973, she had developed a style of dance theatre that took audiences into the darkest, strangest crannies of the human psyche.
  • (14) 798 Arts Zone and the series of studios beyond it constitute a cranny where old streets and buildings have been spared by the bulldozer and turned into a kind of trendy theme park in which the authorities seem not only to permit but – unusually for them – encourage cultural activity.
  • (15) In environmental terms, public toilets are obviously breeding grounds for germs in cities, and Cutler says he'd like to see "ways of improving environments so they become easier to clean, easier to manage – novel surfaces and structures, so there aren't so many nooks and crannies in public areas.
  • (16) Agriculture has long existed in the nooks and crannies of urban life.
  • (17) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Nathaniel Samson, 25, Hertfordshire Rating: 4 out of 5 – ‘Any nook or cranny can now be Pallet Town’ Professor Willow holds out his hand and I’m immediately back in Pallet Town.
  • (18) The homeless, who seem to have filled every spare nook and cranny in Mogadishu, live with this every day.
  • (19) Whatabouttery prefers a narrative centred on the evils of the bogeyman rightwing “prime minister for women”, rather than acknowledging sexist behaviour is rife in almost every nook and cranny of society, including places occupied by the political left.
  • (20) Be sure to check the nooks and crannies for delights from limited-edition manga T-shirts to art badges and other experimental fare.

Furrow


Definition:

  • (n.) A trench in the earth made by, or as by, a plow.
  • (n.) Any trench, channel, or groove, as in wood or metal; a wrinkle on the face; as, the furrows of age.
  • (n.) To cut a furrow in; to make furrows in; to plow; as, to furrow the ground or sea.
  • (n.) To mark with channels or with wrinkles.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The contractile ring exists from about 20 sec after anaphase to the end of furrowing activity, i.e., 6-7 min at 20 degrees C. It is closely associated with the plasma membrane at all times, and is probably assembled there.
  • (2) Committing to ploughing a lone furrow without international agreement will damage our economy for little or no environmental benefit.
  • (3) The orientations of the cleavage spindles and the corresponding furrows' positions are assumed to be correlated to the field's temporal evolution which, in turn, is determined by flows of cytoplasmic components originated by the changes in the membrane shape.
  • (4) Some fields had lightly furrowed brows, others deep gullies and humpbacked hills.
  • (5) These observations suggest that the double strands on the P-face are registered with the grooves (type I or type II) on the complementary E-face and that a row of particles on the E-face is registered with a furrow-like region between two rows in the double strands on the P-face.
  • (6) New work is required to identify the signals from the mitotic spindle that specify the position of the furrow.
  • (7) Daballen navigates the jeep between thorn bushes and over furrows, guided by a rising moon and his intimate knowledge of the terrain.
  • (8) Near the end of first cleavage, membrane of the outer, pigmented surface of the embryo and a short band of membrane at the leading edge of the furrow displayed a high silver grain density, but the remainder of the furrow membrane was lightly labeled.
  • (9) We report the results obtained from 18 women whose facial folds and furrows were treated with augmentation therapy.
  • (10) The events that lead to the cell shape changes mediating ventral furrow formation require the transcription of zygotic genes under the control of twist and snail.
  • (11) Many leapt from the tyres they were swinging in to furrow their brows and howl in anger.
  • (12) During conversion of cells to protoplasts, plasma membrane invaginations were arranged end-to-end to form prolonged furrows which persisted until cell wall regeneration had been completed.
  • (13) 3-D-reconstructions of serial sections of human embryos show that the margin of the lip furrow band is irregular and consists of an abundance of individual epithelial excrescences.
  • (14) We then show that stimulatory signals of the right kind would induce furrows at the locations observed, in spherical cells as well as cells distorted by experimental manipulation.
  • (15) In gastrulae, spectrin accumulates near the embryo surface, especially at the forming amnioproctodeal invagination and cephalic furrow.
  • (16) The present observations indicate that the previous descriptions of the urodele carotid labyrinth should be corrected: a vascular ring exists around the common carotid artery and the latter shows a corresponding narrowing at the entrance to the carotid labyrinth; the vascular ring forms the most proximal part of the external carotid rete; the central chamber occupies only a part of the proximal end of the carotid labyrinth; the internal carotid rete and the external carotid rete constitute a continuous rete mirabile; and a distinct furrow exists in the boundary between these two portions of the rete mirabile.
  • (17) Injection of autologous adipose tissue removed via liposuction has been used clinically for facial contouring, the aging face, furrows, facial atrophy, acne scars, nasolabial folds, chin, and various other surgical defects.
  • (18) A cluster of facial actions comprised of brow bulging, eyes squeezed shut, deepening of the naso-labial furrow and open mouth was associated most frequently with the invasive procedure.
  • (19) Thus, the orientation of mitotic furrows depends on the internal polarity of the cell before mitosis.
  • (20) The semidominant and nonpleiotropic suppressors at four of the six loci display defective eye phenes themselves, and the phenotypically normal mutants at a fifth locus are suspected alleles of a gene represented by recessive furrowed eye mutants.