Verb
crawl with (third-person singular simple present crawls with, present participle crawling with, simple past and past participle crawled with)
(transitive, idiomatic) To include or be covered with swarms or large numbers of (something, especially insects or people); to have in great numbers or multitudes.
The kitchen was crawling with cockroaches.
The scene of the incident was crawling with reporters for days afterwards.
FD action by the SEC against the CFO of American Commercial Lines (ACL) seems like a throwback to an interrupted line, to the enforcement actions from 2002 to 2005 that slowed to a crawl with the "Siebel II" action in late 2005. Source: Internet
My old Dell XPS would crawl with Xubuntu, whereas it would fly with Lubuntu. Source: Internet
Execution of facilities and services has moved at a crawl with little progress to show. Source: Internet
Lateral bear crawl with shoulder tap - core, shoulders and your balance get a great workout here. Source: Internet
My scratched-upon manuscripts are just so messy, I think I would just crawl with embarrassment at anyone seeing them. Source: Internet