Yes, it’s that huge device that is attached to a tall building and either raises or lowers building materials. I’ve often wondered how the driver, so far up in the air, can see where to pick up or drop a load.
Typically, cranes are used to move large or heavy loads, like large fibreglass swimming pools, from the roadside into the front or back yard.
There are train breakdown cranes, dockside cranes and broken down cranes, usually on the road in the middle of rush hour.
They used to have dog men, people who hung on grimly, going up or down with the load. Not me when the building is sixty or seventy floors up.
There can be smaller cranes built on trucks that are for smaller jobs like lifting boats or sometimes parts of houses. We had one near us once, lifting a swimming pool into a front yard.
Then there is the crane, a bird. Cranes are usually tall birds with long legs.
In Asia, the crane symbolises happiness and eternal youth, whereas in Japan, the crane symbolises good fortune and longevity.
And other uses such as:
The boy craned his neck to see the batter hit a home run.
Usually, if I crane my neck, it causes days of muscular pain, i.e., literally the definition of a pain in the neck!
It means to distort your body or neck in order to see something more clearly, especially if you are in a bad position, like behind a pylon or tree.
It can also be used to describe a trolley with a large boom with a camera attached.