grove - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
A grove
From Middle English grove, grave, from Old English grāf, grāfa (“grove; copse”), from Proto-West Germanic *graib, *graibō (“branch, group of branches, thicket”), from Proto-Germanic *graibaz, *graibô (“branch, fork”).[1]
Related to Old English grǣf, grǣfe (“brushwood; thicket; copse”), Old English grǣfa (“thicket”), dialectal Norwegian greive (“ram with splayed horns”), dialectal Norwegian greivlar (“ramifications of an antler”), dialectal Norwegian grivla (“to branch, branch out”), Old Norse grein (“twig, branch, limb”). More at greave.
grove (plural groves)
- A small forest.
Coordinate term: woodlot- 1936, Rollo Ahmed, The Black Art, London: Long, page 160:
Religious sodomy was practised by male prostitutes in the Hebrew temple groves, which was one of the abominations of Israel that Josiah cleared away.
- 1936, Rollo Ahmed, The Black Art, London: Long, page 160:
- A small forest with minimal undergrowth.
Coordinate terms: glade, clearing
Near-synonym: woodland - An orchard of fruit trees.
- (Druidism, Wicca) A place of worship.
- A lodge of the Ancient Order of Druids.
small forest
Asturian: sotu (ast) f, mata (ast) f, viesca (ast) f, viescu (ast) m
Azerbaijani: ağaclıq
Basque: please add this translation if you can
Catalan: arbreda f
Chinese:
Mandarin: 林子 (zh) (línzi), 小樹林 / 小树林 (zh) (xiǎoshùlín)Estonian: please add this translation if you can
Faroese: lund f
Galician: frondía f, touza (gl) f, quintá f, bravádego m, souto (gl) m
Greek: σύδεντρο (el) n (sýdentro), άλσος (el) n (álsos)
Ancient Greek: ἄλσος n (álsos)Hunsrik: please add this translation if you can
Ingrian: lehto
Interlingua: boschetto m
Italian: boschetto (it), piantagione (it)
Kashubian: please add this translation if you can
Lithuanian: gojus m
Luxembourgish: please add this translation if you can
Macedonian: лаг m (lag), шу́мјак m (šúmjak), ко́рија f (kórija), ки́чер m (kíčer), ки́тка f (kítka), шу́мичка f (šúmička), го́ричка f (górička), за́бел m (zábel)
Marshallese: bukun
Occitan: boscaton m, boscata f, bosquet (oc) m, bosquilhon (oc) m, bosquilh (oc) m
Romanian: pădurice (ro) f, crâng (ro) n, arboret (ro) n, tufiș (ro) n, dumbravă (ro) f
Russian: ро́ща (ru) f (róšča), лесо́к (ru) m (lesók), гай (ru) m (gaj) ((dialectal))
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: луг m, гај m, шумица f, шумарак m
Latin: lug (sh) m, gaj (sh) m, šumica (sh) f, šumarak (sh) mSlovene: gaj m
grove (third-person singular simple present groves, present participle groving, simple past and past participle groved)
- To cultivate in groves; to grow naturally so as to form groves.
- 1841, Sapp R, “Orchard Lake”, in L. L. Hamline, editor, The Ladies Repository, Volume 1, page 165:
It is called "Orchard Lake," from the fact, that near the centre is an island embracing an area of about fifty acres of land, well groved with different kinds of shrubbery; and near the centre of this island stand a number of aged apple-trees, planted, perhaps, a century since by the hand of some Indian. - 1822, Robert Chapman, The Topographical Picture of Glasgow in its Ancient and Modern State, 3rd edition, page 195:
The trees and shrubs are not arranged after any particular system, but are scattered or groved together in various parts of the garden. - 1984, Queensland Botany Bulletin, Issue 3, Department of Primary Industries, page 82,
Virtually recognizable groving occurs in some A. aneura associations in the west. Further east some diffuse groving may occur, but is difficult to recognize without the benefit of aerial photographs.
- 1841, Sapp R, “Orchard Lake”, in L. L. Hamline, editor, The Ladies Repository, Volume 1, page 165:
- (forestry, of trees) To cultivate with periodic harvesting that also serves to create order (gaps and lines of trees) to facilitate further harvesting.
- 1842 February 5, The Gardeners Chronicle, page 86:
In Herefordshire, especially on the northern and eastern sides, Oak timber abounds; and in many of the woods it is usual to have felling at periods varying from sixteen to twenty years; the straightest and handsomest are left for timber, or, as it is called, groved; and they are from time to time thinned, and a regular distance kept between them. The effect produced on these groved trees is, that from being exposed to air and sun, the rapidity of their growth is increased in bulk, height, and quality; and in sixty or eighty years they become valuable timber.
- 1842 February 5, The Gardeners Chronicle, page 86:
- To plough or gouge with lines.
- 1823, Instinct, in "Sholto and Reuben Percy" (Thomas Byerley), The Percy Anecdotes: Original and Select, Volume 9: Instinct—Ingenuity, page 138,
Very frequently, however, to shorten the distance to the upper nurseries, where they[the ants] have to take the eggs, they project an arch of about ten inches in length, and half an inch in breadth, groved or worked into steps, on its upper surface, to allow of a more easy passage. - 1841, New York State Assembly, Documents of the Assembly of the State of New York, volume 2, page 14:
The floor of first story and piazza to be laid with Georgia pine, in narrow courses planed, groved and tongued, and laid in the best manner.
- 1823, Instinct, in "Sholto and Reuben Percy" (Thomas Byerley), The Percy Anecdotes: Original and Select, Volume 9: Instinct—Ingenuity, page 138,
- (gouge with lines): groove
- ^ Puppel, S. (2010); Language History and Linguistic Modelling: A Festschrift for Jacek Fisiak on His 60th Birthday. Germany: De Gruyter., p. 134-135
grove
grove
- inflection of grof:
Inherited from Old English grāf, grāfa.
- (Early Middle English) IPA(key): /ˈɡrɑːv(ə)/
- IPA(key): /ˈɡrɔːv(ə)/
grove (plural groves)
- grove (small forest)
- English: grove
- Scots: grave (obsolete)
- “grōve, n.(1).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 6 October 2018.
grove
grove
grove