释义 |
grot1 /ɡrɒt /noun [mass noun] British informalSomething unpleasant, dirty, or of poor quality: they watch endless grot on telly...- From his letter last week he seemed to suggest that he would rather have the insane hubbub and grot of the capital transported to the Lakes so he can continue to feel at home.
- And as a fully grown adult I have been known to put off going to the loo for hours, even days, at a time if there has been the merest hint of grot anywhere near the pot.
- Because we were the generation that had been raised on a diet of 1970s dreariness, of safety-pinned punks and urban grot.
Origin 1960s: back-formation from grotty. Rhymes allot, begot, Bernadotte, blot, bot, capot, clot, cocotte, cot, culotte, dot, forgot, garrotte (US garrote), gavotte, got, hot, jot, knot, lot, Mayotte, motte, not, Ott, outshot, plot, pot, rot, sans-culotte, Scot, Scott, shallot, shot, slot, snot, sot, spot, squat, stot, swat, swot, tot, trot, undershot, Wat, Watt, what, wot, yacht grot2 /ɡrɒt /Origin Early 16th century: from French grotte, from Italian grotta, via Latin from Greek kruptē 'vault, crypt'. |