Definitions
a living organism characterized by voluntary movement
Word origin
From Middle English creature in the original sense of “a created thing”, borrowed via Old French creature, criature, from Latin creātūra, from creō. By surface analysis, create + -ure. Displaced native Old English ġesċeaft. Doublet of craythur and critter.
Used in a sentence
“insects and other creatures”
“But what would be the sentiment of uppertendom, when it should be rumored that the beautiful young creature, of the proud Clarence Delwood's choice, had stooped so low, as to maintain herself by her own hands?”
“Urologists often want live sea horses for study of kidney disorders, for the sea horse is one of the few marine creatures with functioning kidneys.”
Source: Wiktionary, CC BY-SA 4.0
Used as a crossword answer1 curated clues
01“Living being”8 letters
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