English edit

Etymology edit

grope +‎ -ery

Noun edit

gropery (plural groperies)

  1. (uncommon) Groping; the act of, or an instance of, groping.
    • 1831, The Gentleman's Magazine, page 553:
      State quacks, bills for Popery,
      Not for our merits, Lord, we claim,
      Stage-reminiscences, frolics, and fibs,
      Exemption from the woe;
      Lumps, bumps, gall and scull-gropery,
      We ask it all in Mercy's name, []
    • 1887, Temple Bar: A London Magazine for Town and Country Readers, page 47:
      What the deuce, then, should make you shrink now, when almost all drudgery, and gropery and pokery is over; when you have plenty of materials to produce, and every step will bring you into a more pleasurable country, []
    • 1969, Morton M. Hunt, The Affair: A Portrait of Extra-marital Love in Contemporary America, Signet Book:
      [] including “party gropery” - the brief surreptitious petting that often goes on in gardens, on balconies, and in kitchens — is analogous to the orgiastic festivals in which married people, in preliterate societies, were permitted a brief period of   []
    • 1991 (printed), Thomas Twining, A Selection of Thomas Twining's Letters, 1734-1804: The Record of a Tranquil Life, Edwin Mellen Press, page 257:
      To look over your MS will be pure amusement & gratification to me; & it will be kindness to furnish me with so pleasant a relief from my own faggings, & book-huntings, & groperies, & pokeries, & sweepings, & cobweb-catchings.
    • 1993, Kenneth Branagh (screenplay and film notes), William Shakespeare, Much Ado about Nothing, W. W. Norton & Company (→ISBN), page 27:
      She finds this unspeakably funny and barks herself off into the darkness whilst the gropery of her partner goes on apace. Exterior / CHAPEL YARD / Night / Drinking Fountain BEATRICE charges into view, []

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