1 (of people) to move on hands and knees or with the front of the body on the ground -- lézt (po kolenou)
The baby can’t walk yet, but she crawls everywhere.
3 to be covered with crawling things -- hemžit se
His hair was crawling with lice.
4 a very slow movement or speed -- loudání, ploužení se
We drove along at a crawl.
5 a style of swimming in which the arms make alternate overarm movements -- kraul
She’s better at the crawl than she is at the breaststroke.
When the larvae were placed in water they rarely rose to the surface ; mostly they crawled around at the bottom of the vessel without showing the typical wriggling motion.
A fully equipped and fitted out diner was much heavier than a mobile home, and when it was towed on its own wheels it moved at a crawling pace.
Heart-clearing morning sky: in the offing smoke crawls; that is the warship he is aboard.
However, there seems to be no significant effect of age, gender, and other motor development (like smiling or crawling) on the onset of babbling.
They are smaller, and their habit of nocturnal feeding is peculiar, as is also that of crawling considerable distances inside the clothing.
The females readily crawled onto the host, and typically oviposited within a few seconds.
Reaching, sitting, crawling, grasping, walking, and throwing are just a few of the plethora of skills babies master in their first few years of life.
As infants move about by walking, cruising, and crawling, they reach for different items, at different levels and locations, and from a variety of postures.