crowbill

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See also: crow-bill

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

An 18th-century illustration of surgical instruments, with a crowbill (sense 1) shown in the bottom right corner as figure 5.
A bec de corbin or crowbill (sense 2), a type of poleaxe.

From crow (bird of the genus Corvus) +‎ bill (beak of a bird). Sense 1 (“kind of forceps”) is probably from its appearance, while sense 2 (“type of poleaxe”) is a calque of French bec de corbin (literally crow or raven's beak).

Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

crowbill (plural crowbills)

  1. (surgery) A kind of forceps for extracting bullets, etc., from wounds.
    Synonym: crow's bill
  2. (weaponry, historical) Synonym of bec de corbin (poleaxe with a modified hammerhead and a spike mounted on the top of the pole)

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