Crumb may refer to: Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... It has been suggested that French Wiktionary be merged into this article or section. ...
Crumb (film), a 1994 documentary film about the comic artist Robert Crumb and his family
Breadcrumb, a small particle of dry or very dry bread
Crumb, (a baked goods doughy structure, crullers don't have small particles, but they do have internal structure, which is also called a crumb
In people: Crumb is a 1994 documentary film about the noted underground comic artist R. Crumb and his family. ... Breadcrumbs or bread crumbs (regional variants: breading, crispies) are small particles of dry or very dry bread, which are used for breading foods, topping casseroles, stuffing poultry, thickening stews, and adding inexpensive bulk to meatloaves and similar dishes. ... Breadcrumbs or breadcrumb trails is a navigation technique used in user interfaces. ... This article is about the unit of information. ...
Charles Crumb the elder brother of the comic artist Robert Crumb
Aline Kominsky-Crumb the wife of the comic artist Robert Crumb
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Crumbs protein is essential for the biogenesis of the adherens junction and the establishment of apical polarity in ectodermally derived epithelial cells.
Crumbs protein is distributed over the entire apical cell surface of epithelial cells and accumulates at the outer margin of the apical membrane where neighboring cells are in contact.
This suggests that the polarizing activity of Crumbs arises from a direct or indirect binding of the Crumbs protein to adherens junction material at the outer rim of the marginal zone.
The first recognizable form of the word crumb was in an ancient Babylonian text reffered to, by historians, as ‘the book of statements’ written in an ancient Babylonian dialect called Babulak.
It is only now in modern times that people have started saying “crumbs” in order to avoid saying “crap”, completely defeating the whole point of saying “crap” in the first place, and beginning what looks to be a long and unstoppable linguistic cycle, often referred to by specialists as the “crap-crumb cycle”.
The most famous crumbs currently known to man are undoubtedly Jamarcus McFlan's infamous gravity-defying crumblettes, that were simultaneously presented to the both the FBI and the Cambodian Fishmonger's Union on 18th Feb 1986.