groom
How to Use Groom
Learner’s notesIn 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.
The grooming (in the criminal sense) is a serious, specific term for predatory manipulation — don't use it casually for ordinary mentoring or coaching.
Word Forms
groomed past tense, grooms plural, grooms plural, Grooms plural, grooms singular
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.