The cranny in the foundation is allowing small animals to enter the structure.
the house was festooned with balloons for the birthday party.
A nook is a corner and a cranny is a crack. Eric Partridge's "Origins" (4th ed) suggests the origin of nook is Middle English nok which is also akin to the semantic group that gives us neck. The same source suggests cranny is the diminutive of the Old French cran, meaning notch. A variation is cren, which by some other route gives crenellation. All this suggests a cranny is more of a small notch than a crack.
the word rag in a sentence
A sentence with the word 'porcupine' in it is no different from any other sentence, it is just a sentence referring to a porcupine.
a sentence using the word endotracheal
We searched every cranny of this apartment, but we couldn't find your glasses. The old books were in a dark cranny of the attic.
In the word "cranny," the primary accent falls on the first syllable "cran."
We almost didn't see the kitten, since it was hiding in a small nook.
Morgan Cranny is 6' 2".
He was thoroughly confused by the one way streets. The team thoroughly cleaned every nook and cranny of the old house.
Robert F. Cranny was born on 1981-07-02.
canny
Morgan Cranny was born on November 12, 1970, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
"Cranny's crony" is a playful or fictional way of referring to someone who is a close friend or associate of Cranny, a made-up character. It does not hold any specific meaning in language or literature, and is more of a whimsical or imaginative term.
To search in "any nook or cranny" for an item means to search in every conceivable place for it.
Cranny.
A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE