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Showing words for GRUBBER using the English dictionary
7 Letter Words for Grubber
6 Letter Words for Grubber
5 Letter Words for Grubber
4 Letter Words for Grubber
3 Letter Words for Grubber
Definitions for Grubber
[1] the thick-bodied, sluggish larva of several insects, as of a scarab beetle.
[2] a dull, plodding person; drudge.
[3] an unkempt person.
[4] Slang . food; victuals.
[5] any remaining roots or stumps after cutting vegetation to clear land for farming.
[6] to dig; clear of roots, stumps, etc.
[7] to dig up by the roots; uproot (often followed by up or out ).
[8] Slang . to supply with food; feed.
[9] Slang . to scrounge: to grub a cigarette.
[10] to dig; search by or as if by digging: We grubbed through piles of old junk to find the deed.
[11] to lead a laborious or groveling life; drudge: It's wonderful to have money after having to grub for so many years.
[12] to engage in laborious study.
[13] Slang . to eat; take food.
[14] a person who grubs
[15] another name for grub hoe
[16] rugby a kick of the ball along the ground
[17] cricket a delivery which keeps very low upon bouncing
[18] (when tr, often foll by up or out ) to search for and pull up (roots, stumps, etc) by digging in the ground
[19] to dig up the surface of (ground, soil, etc), esp to clear away roots, stumps, etc
[20] (intr; often foll by in or among) to search carefully
[21] (intr) to work unceasingly, esp at a dull task or research
[22] slang to provide (a person) with food or (of a person) to take food
[23] (tr) slang , mainly US to scrounge to grub a cigarette
[24] the short legless larva of certain insects, esp beetles
[25] slang food; victuals
[26] a person who works hard, esp in a dull plodding way
[27] British informal a dirty child
Words nearby Grubber
grubgrowth-onset diabetes, groyne, grozing iron, grozny, gru, grub, grub beam, grub hoe, grub saw, grub screw, grub street
Origin of Grubber
1250–1300; Middle English grubbe (noun), grubben (v.); akin to Old High German grubilōn to dig, German grübeln to rack (the brain), Old Norse gryfia hole, pit; see grave1, groove
Other words from Grubber
grub·ber , noun
Word origin for Grubber
C13: of Germanic origin; compare Old High German grubilōn to dig, German grübeln to rack one's brain, Middle Dutch grobben to scrape together; see grave ³, groove