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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
groat
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Back in the days when a groat and a half, etc.
▪ But one thing is sure, warm groats are better than cold ones.
▪ He and his fellow inmates were fed three times a week with half-cooked groats and had very little water to drink.
▪ It seemed to me that I smelled groats and mushrooms cooking.
▪ Nora makes a supper of groats and curly kale.
▪ The soup was a mash of wheatmeal flour and groats.
▪ They had cooked groats for supper.
▪ Though the groats had been well covered with gravy, I ate without tasting their flavor.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Groat

Groat \Groat\, n. [LG. gr[=o]te, orig., great, that is, a great piece of coin, larger than other coins in former use. See Great.]

  1. An old English silver coin, equal to four pence.

  2. Any small sum of money.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
groat

medieval European coin, late 14c., probably from Middle Dutch groot, elliptical use of adj. meaning "great, big" (in sense of "thick"); see great. Recognized from 13c. in various nations, in 14c. it was roughly one-eighth an ounce of silver; the English groat coined 1351-2 was worth four pence. Also see groschen.

Wiktionary
groat

Etymology 1 n. (context chiefly in the plural English) hulled grain Etymology 2

n. 1 (context archaic or historical English) Any of various old coins of England and Scotland. 2 An historic English silver coin worth four English pennies, still minted as one of the set of Maundy coins.

WordNet
groat

n. a former English silver coin worth four pennies [syn: fourpence]

Wikipedia
Groat (coin)

The groat is the traditional name of a long-defunct English silver coin worth four English pennies, and also a Scottish coin originally worth fourpence, with later issues being valued at eightpence and one shilling.

Groat (grain)

Groats (or in some cases, "berries") are the hulled kernels of various cereal grains such as oat, wheat, rye and barley. Groats are whole grains that include the cereal germ and fiber-rich bran portion of the grain as well as the endosperm (which is the usual product of milling).

Groats can also be produced from pseudocereal seeds such as buckwheat.

Groat (surname)

Groat is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Dick Groat (born 1930), former two-sport athlete
  • Nikkie Groat (21st century), Miss Teen USA 2005 delegate
Groat

Groat may refer to:

  • Groat (coin), one of several coins formerly used in England, Wales, Scotland, Ireland, British Guiana and the British West Indies
  • Groat (grain), a form of processed cereal grain
  • Groat (surname)
  • Groat Road, a freeway in Edmonton, Alberta Canada
    • Groat Bridge

Usage examples of "groat".

My erotic inconvenience made me very uncomfortable, my mind felt deeply the consciousness of my degradation, and I did not possess a groat!

But Dame Fortune was not of the same opinion, for she refused to smile upon me from the very first step I took in the career, and in less than a week I did not possess a groat.

I was bound in honour to pay the next morning, and I did not possess a groat.

It was only three or four days later that I ventured on asking her what she would have done, without a groat in her possession, having not one acquaintance in Parma, if I had been afraid to declare my love, and if I had gone to Naples.

Squire Crotchet had also one daughter, whom he had christened Lemma, and who, as likely to be endowed with a very ample fortune was, of course, an object very tempting to many young soldiers of fortune, who were marching with the march of mind, in a good condition for taking castles, as far as not having a groat is a qualification for such exploits.

He that his hand will put in this mittain, He shall have multiplying of his grain, When he hath sowen, be it wheat or oats, So that he offer pence, or elles groats.

Lady Widmore, declaring that she was in stitches, said that any kidnapper who thought to wring a groat out of a family that had not a feather to fly with must be so bottleheaded that even such a goosecap as Hester would be able to escape from his clutches.

Man, I kenned your gudesire well, and many a pouchful of groats I had from him when I was a laddie.

Pullings glanced at his perfect decks, the white-gloved sideboys and the new-covered manropes ready to bring the visitor aboard, the powdered and pipe-clayed Marines prepared to stamp and clash by way of martial compliment, the bosun and his mates waiting with their shining silver calls, and then hurried below himself, to shove a groat, emerging only when the caique was within hailing distance.

In this obvious spot, the small circle of colored groats was laid out on the ground for the oath-making couple, surrounded by a multipointed star for the principal witnesses.

One other genuine quality he has which crowns all these, and that is this: to a friend in want, he will not depart with the weight of a soldered groat, lest the world might censure him prodigal, or report him a gull: marry, to his cockatrice or punquetto, half a dozen taffata gowns or satin kirtles in a pair or two of months, why, they are nothing.

Leave off playing, believe me, the very moment you see luck turning, even if you should, at that moment, win but one groat.

But Dame Fortune was not of the same opinion, for she refused to smile upon me from the very first step I took in the career, and in less than a week I did not possess a groat.

But while you are reflecting, remember this: in the heat of the moment any man may blurt out a blackguardly expression: yet after a while any man worth a groat knows he must unsay it.

On the evening when Mildred left her gift of turkey, two figures had disappeared into the fog, headed for the beach, and one of them had been smoking Groat and Boddle Number Five.