groomed 的 2 个定义
- a bridegroom.
- a man or boy in charge of horses or the stable.
- any of several officers of the English royal household.
- Archaic. a manservant.
- to tend carefully as to person and dress; make neat or tidy.
- to clean, brush, and otherwise tend.
- to prepare for a position, election, etc.: The mayor is being groomed for the presidency.
- to tend by removing dirt, parasites, or specks of other matter from the fur, skin, feathers, etc.: often performed as a social act.
groomed 近义词
make ready, prepare physically
更多groomed例句
- Instead, for the select few in attendance, it was almost like celebrating a wedding without the bride and groom.
- As a medical student in Richmond, Eleanor Love showed up to as many wedding venues as possible, even when she didn’t know the bride and groom.
- Brides and grooms have been forced to become amateur public-health prognosticators.
- Many brides and grooms have sunk a significant amount of money into rescheduling their events.
- The bad news for guests—a group not mutually exclusive from the brides and grooms, especially those of a certain age who find themselves on the wedding circuit—is there may not be, at least not for a while.
- Women threw rice on peshmerga fighters, a tradition practiced at Syrian weddings when neighbors welcome the bride and groom.
- A couple on Merwedeplein got married on this day, and a friend captured the bride and groom leaving their apartment.
- Manhattan was the patient groom in my unspoken arranged marriage, the implicit goal of any tri-state suburban childhood.
- The charges against the groom as well as against a bridesmaid were dropped.
- And Republicans have just founded a new organization to groom minorities in the party.
- A groom is a chap, that a gentleman keeps to clean his 'osses, and be blown up, when things go wrong.
- Throwing up the window, he saw his young son attempting to mount the groom's pony: the latter objecting.
- Lady Hartledon driving, the boy-groom sitting beside her, and Eddie's short legs striding the pony.
- But the groom who took care of them sprang instantly after them, and kept swimming beside them, guiding and cheering them.
- A former groom; born about 1767; short, thickset, wife-led, one-eyed.