Cranny in a sentence as a noun

There is no nook or cranny that gets left unexplored.

May every patent holder in every nook and cranny start cashing in.

>"The microphones in every nook and cranny are merely filtering a public good, the air.

During the tech bubble people were coming out of every nook and cranny imaginable.

Money follows profits in the same way that water follows gravity - it flows into every nook and cranny it can find.

Really beautiful how diverse the world is and how computing snuck its way into every little nook and cranny.

The main author can be shrill about controversies, but he's vastly knowledgeable about every nook and cranny of the last 50 years' worth of hipness.

They have all the ground-level data about every nook and cranny on American roadways and beyond, and a system in place that keeps this up-to-date.

The math in encryption is fine, however the governments have been inserting themselves into every nook and cranny outside of encryption.

No need for information about products and services to be so pervasively integrated into every nook and cranny of our society.

Then, someone realized: "Hey, we can make even more money if we sell ads on top of the subscription fee." Nobody is going to resist the temptation to stuff ads into every nook and cranny unless it causes them to lose more revenue from losing customers than they gain in ad revenue, which never seems to happen.

I didn't play video games during that period, because I was quite seriously having more fun learning every nook and cranny of any unix or unix-like system I could get my hands on.

If he's trying to argue that Microsoft are misunderstood, that they do deserve respect after all, then maybe respect the hard-nosed business practises which have forced Microsoft products into every nook and cranny despite consistently having a shittier product than the competition.

What you learn in university is only a start point and you should expand your knowledge and curiosity into every nook and cranny of software development that you find interesting, including compilers and many other things that might appear at first "not relevant".

Google's core product is tracking everything published about you, your every movement online, reading all your mail and personal documents and addressbooks, and integrating it with advertising profiles and pushing unwanted invasive social features into every nook and cranny.

It's a great flavor enhancerI wish there were a way to get my food unsalted.> Now that they have the platform they need, they're pushing social integration into all of their features, literally pushing people who know how to do social into every nook and cranny of GoogleAnd "literally" pushing users into adopting it, regardless.

I would have to assume that at some point the cost of two dozen countries looking in between every nook and cranny of 1/3 of the planet exceeds the cost of a two-way position updating system, not to mention the value of being able to avoid even one disaster like this and whatever potential related disasters we have yet to see.

> What is the end result of growth that makes societies "better"?How about the fact that, when we do well, we are a bit more likely to spend that 1% of our resources on new technology, and get stuff that we later take for granted, like flying through the air, curing nasty diseases, and having immense computing power at our fingertips that can reach any nook and cranny of the Earth within milliseconds.

Cranny definitions

noun

a long narrow depression in a surface

See also: crevice crack fissure chap

noun

a small opening or crevice (especially in a rock face or wall)