Crawl
Middle English: of unknown origin; possibly related to Swedish kravla and Danish kravle .
wiktionary
From Middle English crawlen, crewlen, creulen, crallen, *cravelen, from Old Norse krafla (compare Danish kravle(“to crawl, creep”), Swedish kravla), from Proto-Germanic *krablōną (compare Dutch krabbelen, German Low German krabbeln, German krabbeln), frequentative of *krabbōną(“to scratch, scrape”). Compare also West Frisian kreauwelje(“to crawl”), Dutch krevelen, krieuwelen(“to crawl”), German Low German kribbeln, German kribbeln(“to creep, crawl, tingle”). See also crab, crabble.
Compare kraal.
etymonline
crawl (v.)
c. 1200, creulen, "to move slowly by drawing the body across the ground," from a Scandinavian source, perhaps Old Norse krafla "to claw (one's way)," or Danish kravle, from the same root as crab (n.1). If there was an Old English *craflian, it has not been recorded.
Meaning "advance slowly" is from mid-15c. Sense of "have a sensation as of something crawling on the flesh" is from c. 1300. Related: Crawled; crawler; crawling.
crawl (n.)
1818, "act of crawling," from crawl (v.). In the swimming sense from 1903; the stroke was developed by Frederick Cavill, well-known English swimmer who emigrated to Australia and modified the standard stroke of the day after observing South Seas islanders. So called because the swimmer's motion in the water resembles crawling. Meaning "slow progress from one drinking place to another" is by 1883.