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groomal

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology

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From groom +‎ -al, by analogy with bridal.

Adjective

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groomal (not comparable)

  1. (rare) Of or pertaining to a groom (a man who is about to marry).
    • 2000, Sarah Ban Breathnach, A Man’s Journey to Simple Abundance, Scribner, →ISBN, page 326:
      If weddings were organized around grooms, however, appropriate magazines and expos would surely emerge. [] Groomal expos could be held in conjunction with boat shows.
    • 2006, Vicki Howard, “Bridal Magazines”, in Brides, Inc.: American Weddings and the Business of Tradition, Philadelphia, Pa.: University of Pennsylvania Press, →ISBN, page 94:
      For the most part, however, the groom was physically absent or existed as a marginal figure within the pages of bridal magazines. Occasionally, he appeared humorously as the “Forgotten Man.” While he usually had his own section in magazines, it is clear that he was not expected to be the reader. Significantly, advertisers sought bridal business, not groomal business. In fact, men were a hindrance to consumption that had to be overcome.
    • 2011, Roger Dahood, Peter E. Medine, editors, Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History, volume 8, →ISBN, page 131:
      Modern historians have limited “dowry” to refer to the bridal-dos and “dower” to refer to the groomal-dos, but the latter usage has given rise to a good deal of ambiguity.
    • 2018, Sarah Knight, Calm the F**k Down, Quercus, →ISBN:
      Assuming your RIO is to appear as a member of the bridal or groomal party and fête your friends whilst wearing the official wedding frock of their choosing, you may have to resign yourself to looking a bit overstuffed in the photos, then “accidentally” spill some red wine on your duds during dinner and change into that roomy-yet-wedding-appropriate outfit you “totally forgot you had in your trunk!”

Derived terms

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