|  						 |  					   						 									 												  												 												  												 															| verb |  																		1. Make a crackling sound.     |  																	 
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  									 												  |  														  															  |  																		 |  																		"The fallen leaves crepitate under Samuel's feet as he runs through the woods." |  																	 
  |  														  															  |  																		 |  																		"I could practically hear electricity crepitating beneath my fingers when I touched the plasma ball at the science museum." |  																	 
  |  														  															  |  																		 |  																		"Lisa relished how the fire crepitated as more logs were thrown on." |  																	 
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  									 												  |  														 | Latin, early 17th century |  														 
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  									 												  |  														 | When "crepitate" was first used in the early 17th century, it meant "to break wind." That embarrassing meaning has since disappeared, but the roots remain the same: The word comes from the Latin "crepitat-" ("crackled, rustled"), which in turn developed from the Latin verbs "crepitare" and "crepare" ("to rattle"). ... |  														 |  Continue Reading   |  														 
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