A crevice is a narrow crack or opening, a fissure or cleft.
Another word for crevice is crack.
crevice is English, hendedura is Spanish
What do you mean the prefix? The word "crevice" is one word, it comes from Middle English, from Old French crevace, probably from Vulgar Latin *crepācia, from *crepa, from Latin crepāre, to crack.] R3.
The word crevice is a concrete noun, a word for something that can be seen or touched (or get your finger stuck in).
There was a crevice in the cliff face wide enough for a man to take shelter in. Any small crevice in the floor can accumulate dust.
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There are two syllables. Crev-ice.
Crevice, fissure
The word you are looking for is "crevice".
There was a small crevice in the stone walkway, and occasionally seedlings would sprout from it.(A crevice is a narrow crack or opening, not to be confused with the larger crevasse, which is a large chasm, split, or fissure in an ice sheet or glacier.)
(A crevice is a narrow crack, fault, or opening in a surface, as in a floor, wall, or other structure.) At the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem, he left a small paper message in a crevice between the stones. As the wind threatened to blow him off the mountain, he found a small crevice and braced himself.
Crevice is a noun.