出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/05/17 01:54 UTC 版)
1604, short for bridegroom (“husband-to-be”), from 中期英語 brydgrome, alteration (with intrusive r) of earlier bridegome (“bridegroom”), from 古期英語 brȳdguma (“bridegroom”), from brȳd (“bride”) + guma (“man, hero”). In 中期英語, the second element was re-analyzed as or influenced by grom, grome (“attendant”). Guma derives from Proto-Germanic *gumô (“man, person”), from Proto-Indo-European *dʰǵʰm̥mō; it is cognate to Icelandic gumi (cf. Icelandic brúðgumi) and Norwegian gume and, ultimately, human.
From 中期英語 grom, grome (“man-child, boy, youth”), of uncertain origin. Apparently related to Middle Dutch grom (“boy”), Old Icelandic grómr, gromr (“man, manservant, boy”), Old French gromme (“manservant”), and also to Middle Dutch grom (“fish guts”), Middle Low German grôm (“fish guts”), from the same Proto-Germanic root. Possibly from 古期英語 *grōm, from Proto-West Germanic *grōm (“swollen belly, stomach tumour, womb-child, fish roe, fish guts”), from Proto-Germanic *grōaną (“to grow”).
Alternative etymology describes 中期英語 grom, grome as an alteration of gome (“man”) with an intrusive r (also found in bridegroom, hoarse, cartridge, etc.), with the Middle Dutch and Old Icelandic cognates following similar variation of their respective forms.
groom (plural grooms)
groom (third-person singular simple present grooms, present participle grooming, simple past and past participle groomed)
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婿になる
to marry―get married―(どこの婿になる)―marry into a family―(一人娘の婿になる)―marry an heiress
bride and bridegroom―a new couple
a digamist
a deuterogamist
求婚する
the jubilee
付随の
uj