grinds
English edit
Pronunciation edit
Verb edit
grinds
- third-person singular simple present indicative of grind
Noun edit
grinds
- plural of grind
- (Ireland, colloquial) Tutoring; extra lessons in a specific subject outside of school hours.
- 2018, Sally Rooney, Normal People, page 2:
- You're not top of the class in English, he points out. She licks her teeth, unconcerned. Maybe you should give me grinds, Connell, she says.
- (Hawaii, slang) Food, eats.
- (coffee, proscribed) Used ground coffee, coffee grounds.
- 1962, James Baldwin, Another Country, page 313:
- That was a song that Ida sometimes sang, puttering inefficiently about the kitchen, which always seemed sandy with coffee grinds and vaguely immoral with dead cigarettes on the burnt, blistered paint of the shelves.
Usage notes edit
Referring to used coffee as “coffee grinds” is proscribed, as a corruption of “coffee grounds”.[1] The degree of fineness of grinding is referred to as the grind, but ground coffee itself is prescribed to be referred to as grounds, generally either “fresh grounds” if unused, or “spent grounds” if used. The use of grounds to refer to dregs in a liquid dates to the 1300s.[2]
References edit
- ^ Paul Brians (2009) “grinds / grounds”, in Common Errors in English Usage, 2nd edition, Wilsonville, Or.: William, James & Company, →ISBN.
- ^ Coffee talk, Grammarphobia, Patricia T. O’Conner and Stewart Kellerman, October 9, 2012
Anagrams edit
Swedish edit
Noun edit
grinds