engroove
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]engroove (third-person singular simple present engrooves, present participle engrooving, simple past and past participle engrooved)
- To fit into a groove; to channel
- 1816, Encyclopaedia Perthensis[1], Digitized edition, J. Brown, published 2010, page 668:
- The box i is engrooved into the edge of the stock a b, so that it may move freely ...
- 1880, RD Blackmore, Mary Anerley[2], HTML edition, The Gutenberg Project, published 2006:
- The boy had forgotten that the moor just here was broken by a narrow glen, engrooved with sliding water.
References
[edit]- Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia Supplement, Vol. XI, Page 0427, engroove