Groom in a sentence as a noun

The groom gets one more pal, but it’s a woman.

If you can't groom a leader to replace you in 15 years, that's a problem.

No money was spent, other than my sister's cheap, plain white dress and the groom's simple suit.

Best wishes to the bride and groom on their unending journey together.

But know there's a lot of people who:- May have grown up with the idea of a bride and groom for most of their lives.

If your boss is genuinely trying to improve you or groom you for something better, all such feedback will be verbal.

The groom's great grandmother remarked on how the wedding was "the way weddings were before everyone went crazy.

If I only had a business that allowed people to groom their pets with power tools, I could use every one of those pieces of advice!

Groom in a sentence as a verb

The bees, once dusted, trigger their cleaning behaviour - they begin grooming themselves to get rid of the sugar.

The TSA director explicitly endorsed the same strategies used to groom children for sexual abuse.

I think the failure of so many in the software/IT business to dress and groom to professional standards has important consequences.

Maybe nervous dams produced temperamentally nervous pups, and those dams also coincidentally happened to be less inclined to lick and groom.

By far the greatest line: "Subsequent to my jokes, the evening took a peculiar turn... It had the vibe of a wedding dinner where the best man's speech had revealed the groom's infidelity.

It is my job as a company owner to help constrain and groom the subset of what's getting done every day so that the business prospers without burning through people like charcoal briquettes.

You, the leader, will identify a few promising individuals amongst them and groom them to be SMEs in training, giving them the added responsibility and pay increases that they deserve.

When a pup received the comforting experience of licking and grooming as an infant, it grew up to be braver and bolder and better adjusted than a pup who hadn't, whether or not its biological mother was the one who had done the licking and grooming.

Groom definitions

noun

a man participant in his own marriage ceremony

See also: bridegroom

noun

someone employed in a stable to take care of the horses

See also: stableman stableboy hostler ostler

noun

a man who has recently been married

See also: bridegroom

verb

educate for a future role or function; "He is grooming his son to become his successor"; "The prince was prepared to become King one day"; "They trained him to be a warrior"

See also: prepare train

verb

give a neat appearance to; "groom the dogs"; "dress the horses"

See also: dress curry

verb

care for one's external appearance; "He is always well-groomed"

See also: neaten