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Grouts vs Grouty - What's the difference?

grouts | grouty |

As a verb grouts

is (grout).

As an adjective grouty is

full of grout(s), that is, sediment or grouty can be angry or surly, sulky.

grouts

English

Verb

(head)
  • (grout)

  • grout

    English

    Noun

  • A thin mortar used to fill the gaps between tiles and cavities in masonry.
  • Coarse meal; groats.
  • (typically used in the plural ) Dregs, sediment.
  • * Charles Dickens
  • grouts of tea
  • (UK, obsolete) A kind of beer or ale.
  • Verb

  • To insert mortar between tiles.
  • I spent the whole afternoon grouting the kitchen floor.

    grouty

    English

    Etymology 1

    .

    Adjective

    (head)
  • Full of grout(s), that is, sediment.
  • * 1746 , William Ellis, Agriculture improv'd: or, The practice of husbandry display'd , page 74:
  • the Wash of the Dung runs into this Pond, and thickens it to that degree, that many have wondered how the Cattle could drink such grouty , black, stinking Water, full of Lice, Worms, Bugs, and other Insects.
  • * 1830 , William Kitchiner, The Cook's Oracle and Housekeeper's Manual , page 193:
  • Stew no longer than the meat is thoroughly done to eat, and you will obtain excellent broth, without depriving the meat of its nutritious succulence : to boil it to rags, as is the common practice, will not enrich your broths, but make them thick and grouty .

    Etymology 2

    Of uncertain origin; compare grouchy .

    Adjective

    (head)
  • Angry or surly, sulky.
  • * 1888 , in the New Englander and Yale Review , volume 48, page 33:
  • How easy to be kind and pleasant: how uncomfortable to be rude and grouty !
  • * 2003 , Diane Ayres, Other Girls , page 390:
  • Amanda was fuming. But then, the telltale grappling and stumble step backward—thump—against the wall, which braced them through the ensuing make-out moment, however brief, until the grouty girl could be heard cooing with pleasure.
  • * 2005 , Evelyn Richardson, Desired Haven , page 3:
  • Though I suppose if you've no one to love but a grouty old mother, you don't have the worry and fear for your menfolk heavy on you, Mercy conceded.
  • .
  • Turbid as with liquor.
  • Anagrams

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