Old English crudan "to press, crush." Cognate with Middle Dutch cruden, Dutch kruijen "to press, push," Middle High German kroten "to press, oppress," Norwegian kryda "to crowd." Related: Crowded; crowding.
crowd (n.)
1560s, "large group of persons, multitude," from crowd (v.). The earlier word was press (n.). Crowd (n.) was used earlier in the now-archaic sense of "act of pressing or shoving" (c. 1300). From 1650s as "any group or company of persons contemplated in a mass." Crowd-pleaser is from 1943; crowd-control is from 1966; crowd-surf (v.) is by 1995; crowdsourcing (n.) is from 2006.
The students crowded the auditorium
men in straw boaters and waxed mustaches crowded the verandah
a crowd of insects assembled around the flowers
he still hangs out with the same crowd
croupier
crouton
Crow
crow
crowbar
crowd
crowdfund
crown
crown-prince
crows-nest
crozier