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Definition of criss-cross verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

criss-cross

verb
 
/ˈkrɪs krɒs/
 
/ˈkrɪs krɔːs/
[transitive, intransitive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they criss-cross
 
/ˈkrɪs krɒs/
 
/ˈkrɪs krɔːs/
he / she / it criss-crosses
 
/ˈkrɪs krɒsɪz/
 
/ˈkrɪs krɔːsɪz/
past simple criss-crossed
 
/ˈkrɪs krɒst/
 
/ˈkrɪs krɔːst/
past participle criss-crossed
 
/ˈkrɪs krɒst/
 
/ˈkrɪs krɔːst/
-ing form criss-crossing
 
/ˈkrɪs krɒsɪŋ/
 
/ˈkrɪs krɔːsɪŋ/
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  1. to make a pattern on something with many straight lines that cross each other
    • criss-cross (something) Searchlights were criss-crossing the sky.
    • The smaller streets criss-cross in a grid pattern.
    • be criss-crossed with something The city is criss-crossed with canals.
    Word Originearly 17th cent. (denoting a figure of a cross preceding the alphabet in a hornbook, an old fashioned teaching aid): from Christ-cross (in the same sense in late Middle English), from Christ's cross. The form was later treated as a reduplication of cross.
See criss-cross in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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