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Gruntled vs Gruntle - What's the difference?

gruntled | gruntle |

In humorous|lang=en terms the difference between gruntled and gruntle

is that gruntled is (humorous) satisfied, pleased, contented while gruntle is (humorous) to humour; to induce the opposite effect of causing a person to become disgruntled.

As an adjective gruntled

is (humorous) satisfied, pleased, contented.

As a verb gruntle is

(obsolete) to utter small, low grunts or gruntle can be (humorous) to humour; to induce the opposite effect of causing a person to become disgruntled.

As a noun gruntle is

a grunting sound.

gruntled

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • (humorous) Satisfied, pleased, contented.
  • * 1938 , :
  • He spoke with a certain what-is-it in his voice, and I could see that, if not actually disgruntled, he was far from being gruntled .
  • * 1996 March 13, , " Sports of The Times: A Case For Fill-In Coaches," New York Times (retrieved 5 July 2012):
  • After all, a number of players were disgruntled, and a few more were gruntled .
  • * 2009 March 18, , " Tyra—the cause of all evil," Irish Independent (retrieved 5 July 2012):
  • [S]he was rumoured to be rather less than gruntled when The Soup's Joel McHale said: "Here's Ryan Seacrest and Tyra Banks playing Lady and the Tramp ... You figure out which is which."
  • * {{quote-book
  • , year=2011 , year_published= , edition= , editor= , author=Jay Shepherd , title=Firing at Will: A Manager's Guide , chapter=Gruntled Employees citation , genre=Business , publisher=Apress , isbn=781430237389 , page=228 , passage=Gruntled' employees are happy employees. '''Gruntled''' employees like their coworkers. … '''gruntled''' employees like their employers. … So how to you keep your employees ' gruntled ? }}

    Usage notes

    The verb gruntle is not in normal usage. The adjective is used only humorously, as the imagined opposite of disgruntled.

    Antonyms

    * disgruntled

    References

    *

    gruntle

    English

    Etymology 1

    Verb

    (gruntl)
  • (obsolete) To utter small, low grunts.
  • (obsolete) To complain; to grumble
  • Etymology 2

    From .

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • a grunting sound
  • a snort
  • Etymology 3

    back-formation from disgruntled

    Verb

    (gruntl)
  • (humorous) To humour; to induce the opposite effect of causing a person to become disgruntled.
  • Usage notes
    To gruntle is not in normal usage. It has gained a certain currency amongst information security specialists to describe a process whereby the negative feelings of a disgruntled user might be reduced, or positive feelings induced.
    Synonyms
    * regruntle