grouiller

French

Etymology

From Middle French grouiller (to shake, stir, agitate, scold, hasten, swarm, teem, crawl), from Old French grouiller (to rumble), alteration of Old French grouller (to growl), from Middle Dutch grollen (to make a noise, rumble, growl, grunt, grumble, scold), from Old Dutch *grullen, from Proto-Germanic *gruljaną, *graljaną (to shout, make angry, provoke), from Proto-Indo-European *gʰer- (to rattle, make a noise, grumble). Cognate with Middle High German grüllen (to scorn, jeer), Old English griellan (to anger, provoke, vex). More at grill.

Alternate etymology derives sense of crawl from Frankish *grubilōn (to dig, burrow, rummage, crawl), from Proto-Germanic *grubilōną (to dig, search, ponder), from Proto-Indo-European *gʰrebʰ- (to dig, scrape, scratch). Cognate with German grübeln (to brood over, mull over, speculate, ponder), Old Norse grúfla (to bend low, creep, crawl). More at crawl.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɡʁu.je/
  • (file)

Verb

grouiller

  1. (intransitive) to mill about, swarm with people
  2. (intransitive) to swarm or crawl
    La place grouille de touristes. The square is crawling with tourists.
  3. (reflexive, colloquial) to hurry; to get a move on
    Grouille-toi, hein? Hurry up, will you?
    Synonym: magner

Conjugation

Further reading

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