grubber

noun

Etymology

From grub + -er.

  1. inherited from grub
  2. derived from *grub- — “to dig
  3. derived from *grubb-
  4. derived from *grubb-
  5. inherited from *grubbian
  6. inherited from grubben
  7. suffixed as grubber — “grub + er

Definitions

  1. One who grubs.

  2. A tool, implement, or machine of the nature of a grub axe, grub hook, etc

    A tool, implement, or machine of the nature of a grub axe, grub hook, etc; (dialectal) a cultivator.

  3. An attacking short-distance kick in behind the defence in which the ball is bounced along…

    An attacking short-distance kick in behind the defence in which the ball is bounced along the ground, using the uneven bounce of the ball to make it difficult for the defence to retrieve.

    • Take that brilliant backline move off a scrum when Kolbe came off his left wing to put in a neat grubber for Arendse on the right wing to almost round the defense in the corner.
  4. + 2 more definitions
    1. A ball that bounces unusually low such that it is difficult for the batsman to hit…

      A ball that bounces unusually low such that it is difficult for the batsman to hit properly.

    2. A sweetshop.

      • He could, moreover, no longer be tempted to the Grubber, for all chocolate and sweets were taboo.
      • I remember the grubber which smelt of potato chips and chocolate and the steam-heated library with books about monasteries that no one else seemed to look at, and I remember the fresh weedless lawns between the school buildings […]

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for grubber. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA