English edit

Etymology 1 edit

Blend of girl +‎ drool

Noun edit

grool (uncountable)

  1. (informal) Vaginal lubrication derived from sexual arousal.
    • 2013 April 25, The Harvard Independent, The Sex Issue, page 10 (mention) ]
    • 2021, Angela White, Lesbian Taboo Stories, page 22:
      Lucy removed her fingers from Margaret's pussy and brought them up for closer inspection, noticing the sticky grool coating them and seeping into the webbed crevasses between them.
    • 2021, Zadie Black, Conquering the Barbarian Princess, Zadie Black, →ISBN:
      Thick beads of grool were trickling from her pussy now.
    • (Can we date this quote?), S.E. Law, His House, His Rules: A Forbidden Romance, S.E. Law Romance:
      I reach one big hand forward to catch the string of grool that's oozing from her pussy before lifting it to my mouth to taste her moisture. “Oh, it's definitely going to be with me, Miss Fillmore. With me, and no one else ever again []"
    • 2021 June 18, Nikita Storm, Free Use 2: Taken By The Boss Under The Christmas Tree, Nikita Storm:
      He grabbed my hand and dipped it in my pussy, then brought it to my mouth. [] When I was finished lapping up my stringy strands of grool, he grabbed me and laid me down on the velvet rug in front of the Christmas tree.

Etymology 2 edit

Noun edit

grool

  1. Alternative form of gruel
    • 1871, E. G., A woman's reform bill for the unruly member[1], London: William Macintosh, →OCLC, page 77:
      Several patients having indicated that "me" should like to "av' some grool," she ladled it out of her pail into large yellow basins.
    • 1885, William Makepeace Thackeray, Miscellaneous Essays, Sketches and Reviews (The works of William Makepeace Thackeray)‎[2], Smith, Elder, →OCLC, page 198:
      He looked so ill when he went up stairs to bed, that Mrs. Stokes insisted upon making him some grool for him to have warm in bed