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Grok vs Grog - What's the difference?

grok | grog |

As a verb grok

is to have or to have acquired an intuitive understanding of; to know (something) without having to think (such as knowing the number of objects in a collection without needing to count them: see subitize).

As a noun grog is

an alcoholic beverage made with rum and water, especially that once issued to sailors of the Royal Navy.

grok

English

Verb

(grokk)
  • (slang) To have or to have acquired an intuitive understanding of; to know (something) without having to think (such as knowing the number of objects in a collection without needing to count them: see subitize).
  • * {{quote-book
  • , year=1961 , year_published= , edition= , editor= , author=Robert A. Heinlein , title=Stranger in a Strange Land , chapter= , url= , genre= , publisher= , isbn= , page=107 , passage=I do not grok' all fullness of what I read. In the history written by Master William Shakespeare I found myself full of happiness at the death of Romeo. Then I read on and learned that he had discorporated too soon – or so I thought I ' grokked . Why? }}
  • * {{quote-book
  • , year=1968 , title=(The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test) , first=Tom , last=Wolfe , authorlink=Tom Wolfe , isbn=9780553380644 , passage = Grok ?and then it's clear, without anybody having to say it. }}
  • * {{quote-magazine
  • , date= , year=2008 , month=Dec , first= , last= , author=Leslie Anthony , coauthors= , title=Running from Babylon , volume=61 , issue=4 , page=116 , magazine=Skiing , publisher= , issn= , url= , passage=He freely plucks notions and verbiage from science fiction to describe everything from mountain-related undertakings to political subterfuge – like "grok ", a term from Robert Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land, to denote intuitive understanding. }}
  • (slang) To fully and completely understand something in all its details and intricacies.
  • He groks Perl.
    I find it exceedingly doubtful that any person groks quantum mechanics.
  • * {{quote-magazine
  • , date= , year=2008 , month=August , first= , last= , author=Stanley Bing , coauthors= , title=New Help for Hodads , volume=158 , issue=3 , page=152 , magazine=Fortune , publisher= , issn= , url= , passage=Today we take a few moments to help you grok some of the ways that victims of TU can up their hipness – if we may use that term without being considered old school. }}

    Usage notes

    * Grok is used mainly by the geek subculture, though it was heavily used by the counterculture of the 1960s, as evidenced by its repeated appearance in Tom Wolfe's “.”

    See also

    (wikipedia) * Heinlein Society

    grog

    English

    (wikipedia grog)

    Noun

    (-)
  • (label) An alcoholic beverage made with rum and water, especially that once issued to sailors of the Royal Navy.
  • Any alcoholic beverage.
  • An alcoholic beverage made with hot water or tea, sugar and rum, sometimes also with lemon or lime juice and spices, particularly cinnamon.
  • A type of pre-fired clay that has been ground and screened to a specific particle size.
  • Synonyms

    * (ground clay) firesand

    Derived terms

    * groggy

    References

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