croche-pied - meaning and definition. What is croche-pied
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What (who) is croche-pied - definition

WOODWORKING KNIFE
Mocotaugan; Couteau Croche; Couteau croche
  • Crooked Knife

Gai pied         
PERIODICAL LITERATURE
Gai Pied; Le Gai Pied
Gai pied or Gai pied hebdo was a monthly, then weekly (hence the name Hebdo), French gay magazine, founded by Jean Le Bitoux. Its name, which literally means "Gay foot", is a homophone of guêpier, which means a hornet's nest or, figuratively, a trap or pitfall — a reference to the magazine's determination to torment the status-quo.
pied-a-terre         
SMALL SECONDARY RESIDENCE USED TO AVOID COMMUTING
Pied-a-terre; Pied a terre; Pied à terre; Pied‑à‑terre
[?pje?d?:'t?:]
¦ noun (plural pieds-a-terre pronunciation same) a small flat, house, or room kept for occasional use.
Origin
C19: Fr., lit. 'foot to earth'.
pied-a-terre         
SMALL SECONDARY RESIDENCE USED TO AVOID COMMUTING
Pied-a-terre; Pied a terre; Pied à terre; Pied‑à‑terre
(pieds-a-terre)
A pied-a-terre is a small house or flat, especially in a town, which you own or rent but only use occasionally.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Crooked knife

The crooked knife sometimes referred to as a "curved knife", "carving knife," or "mocotaugan," from the Cree term "môhkotâkan," is a woodworking knife, typically with a curved end. The crooked knife is a common tool found amongst the native Americans of the Eastern Woodlands as well as non-native woodworkers. The crooked in "crooked knife" refers to its unusual shape with the handle set at an oblique angle to the blade. The blade can be straight or curved, long or short and can be made of a steel forged specifically for the knife, or from reused hardened steel from another source. The shape of the blade, whether curved or straight, is a function of the carving purpose of the user: straight for whittling wood, making splints for baskets and incising, curved for hollowing out bowls and masks and ladles, as well as myriad other usages.

The 1971 documentary César et son canot d'écorce (César's Bark Canoe) illustrates the use of a crooked knife in the construction of a birch-bark canoe.