groop
English
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]From Middle English grope, grupe, groupe, from Old English grōp (“ditch”), from Proto-Germanic *grōpō (“furrow, ditch, trench”), from Proto-Indo-European *gʰreb-, *gʰrebʰ- (“to dig, furrow, scratch”). Cognate with Scots gruip (“gutter, drain, ditch, trench”), North Frisian groop (“pit”), Dutch groep (“a trench, moat”), Swedish grop (“a pit, ditch, hole, hollow”), Old English grēp, grēpe (“land-drain, ditch; furrow; burrow; privy”). More at grip, groove.
Alternative forms
[edit]Noun
[edit]groop (plural groops)
- (obsolete or UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) A trench or small ditch.
- (obsolete or UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) A trench or drain; particularly, a trench or hollow behind the stalls of cows or horses for receiving their dung and urine.
- 1816, James Cleland, Annals of Glasgow[1], Digitized edition, published 2007, page 373:
- The groop is one foot six inches wide, six and one-half inches deep at one end … to carry off the urine into a reservoir under the Cowhouse, …
- 2008, Dennis O'Driscoll, Seamus Heaney, Stepping stones:
- Cleaning the byre involved barrowing out the contents of the groop, sluicing it down and rebedding it with clean straw.
- (obsolete or UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) A pen for cattle; a byre.
Verb
[edit]groop (third-person singular simple present groops, present participle grooping, simple past and past participle grooped)
Etymology 2
[edit]Alteration of group. More at group.
Noun
[edit]groop (plural groops)
- Obsolete form of group.
- 1828, William Taylor, Historic Survey of German Poetry[2], Digitized edition (Treuttel and Würtz, Treuttel Jun. and Richter), published 2007, page 179:
- Revival of Fine Literature — Swiss groop of Poets ...
- 1834, Charles Augustus Davis, Letters of J. Downing, Major[3], Harper & Brothers, page 158:
- … and laid his Hickory and hat down afore him, and all our folks began to nock noses in little groops here and there;
- 2004, Dept. of Combinatorics and Optimization, Ars Combinatoria, Volumes 72-73[5] (Mathematics), University of Waterloo, page 90:
- A groop divisible design on v points with groop size g and block size k is called a t-GD[k,g,;v] if every subset of t distinct points that contains no two points from the same groop is contained in exactly one block.
Verb
[edit]groop (third-person singular simple present groops, present participle grooping, simple past and past participle grooped)
- Obsolete form of group.
- 1829, The Battle of Navarino: Or the Renegade[6], Digitized edition, published 2010, page 40:
- Grooped around the fires on which they were preparing their provisions, …
References
[edit]- groop in An American Dictionary of the English Language, by Noah Webster, 1828.
- “groop”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911, →OCLC.
- English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *gʰrebʰ-
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms inherited from Old English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with obsolete senses
- British English
- English dialectal terms
- Northern England English
- Scottish English
- English terms with quotations
- English verbs
- English obsolete forms