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noun

groom

GROOM
noun
1
A man on his wedding day, or about to be married.
"The groom looked nervous as he waited at the altar."
2
A person whose job is to care for horses.
"The groom brushed down the horses after the race."
verb
1
To care for someone's or an animal's appearance by cleaning and brushing.
"She grooms her dog every weekend."
"He always grooms himself carefully before an interview."
2
To prepare someone gradually for a role, position, or event.
"The company has been grooming her for a leadership role."
3
To manipulate a child or vulnerable person over time in order to exploit them, especially sexually.
"The charges alleged that he had been grooming the teenager online for months."

How to Use Groom

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishDepending on context: a man about to marry, someone who cares for horses, or (as a verb) to prepare someone/something carefully, sometimes with sinister intent toward a vulnerable person.

Common mistake

The grooming (in the criminal sense) is a serious, specific term for predatory manipulation — don't use it casually for ordinary mentoring or coaching.

Common pairings
groom for office bride and groom well-groomed

Word Forms

groomed past tense, grooms plural, grooms plural, Grooms plural, grooms singular

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Fill the Gap

Can you complete this real example?

The _____ looked nervous as he waited at the altar.

Etymology

Short for "bridegroom," from Old English brydguma ("bride" + "man"); the spelling was later reshaped by association with "groom" meaning a servant who tends horses.

Rhymes for groom

See all rhymes for groom →
Definitions: FreeDict original editorial