cranton
<p>A term used to describe any conceivable physical object, usually small in size, i.e. less than 2 centimetres wide.</p>
<p>The word often refers to some kind of unwanted debris attached to another object. This could include- a naturally produced substance such as ear wax, mucus or some other type of discharge, that is stuck to a human or other animal; or simply some dirt, in situ, upon an object.</p>
<p>In general, cranton can be translated as a relatively small quantity of a substance, for instance that an average human could hold in his/her hand.</p>
<p>Ultimately, the word cranton can be applied to the majority of physically conceivable objects, and is in fact a variant of any name-insignificant word as created by humans among their social groups and not in a standard dictionary.</p>
<p>Other variations include:</p>
<p>wegsin<br />
crastan<br />
crantoid<br />
rintin<br />
gandin<br />
weetee</p>
<p>The word often refers to some kind of unwanted debris attached to another object. This could include- a naturally produced substance such as ear wax, mucus or some other type of discharge, that is stuck to a human or other animal; or simply some dirt, in situ, upon an object.</p>
<p>In general, cranton can be translated as a relatively small quantity of a substance, for instance that an average human could hold in his/her hand.</p>
<p>Ultimately, the word cranton can be applied to the majority of physically conceivable objects, and is in fact a variant of any name-insignificant word as created by humans among their social groups and not in a standard dictionary.</p>
<p>Other variations include:</p>
<p>wegsin<br />
crastan<br />
crantoid<br />
rintin<br />
gandin<br />
weetee</p>
Origin: (rejected by wikipedia)
rec'd July 25, 2005