Crossbar vs. Woodwork — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Crossbar and Woodwork
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Compare with Definitions
Crossbar
A horizontal bar, line, or stripe.
Woodwork
Objects made of or work done in wood, especially wooden interior fittings in a house, as moldings, doors, staircases, or windowsills.
Crossbar
Any transverse bar or piece, such as a bar across a door, or the iron bar or stock which passes through the shank of an anchor.
Woodwork
(countable) Something made from wood.
Crossbar
(sports) The top of the goal structure.
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Woodwork
(uncountable) Wood product.
Crossbar
The top tube of a bicycle frame.
Woodwork
(uncountable) Working with wood.
He does woodwork as a hobby.
Crossbar
(transitive) To mark with a pattern of transverse bars.
Woodwork
A workshop or factory devoted to making wood products.
Crossbar
A transverse bar or piece, as a bar across a door, or as the iron bar or stock which passes through the shank of an anchor to insure its turning fluke down.
Woodwork
A place of concealment or obscurity.
Friends and relatives were coming out of the woodwork to celebrate his good fortune.
So when he wants to, he can just kind of blend into the woodwork.
Crossbar
A horizontal bar that goes across something
Woodwork
The frame of the goal, i.e. the goalpost or crossbar.
That goal was so close, it went in off the woodwork.
Crossbar
Game equipment consisting of a horizontal bar to be jumped or vaulted over
Woodwork
To go completely stealth as a transgender person. From the idea of fading or blending into the woodwork.
Crossbar
Long thin horizontal crosspiece between two vertical posts
Woodwork
Work made of wood; that part of any structure which is wrought of wood.
Woodwork
Work made of wood; especially moldings or stairways or furniture
Woodwork
The craft of a carpenter: making things out of wood
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