grit
See also: Grit
English
    
WOTD – 11 June 2016
    Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ɡɹɪt/
- Audio (AU) - (file) 
- Audio (US) - (file) 
- Rhymes: -ɪt
Etymology 1
    
With early modern vowel shortening, from Middle English grete, griet, from Old English grēot, from Proto-West Germanic *greut, from Proto-Germanic *greutą.
Noun
    

a pile of grit set out for grouse, which the birds swallow to assist in digesting heather
grit (uncountable)
- A collection of hard small materials, such as dirt, ground stone, debris from sandblasting or other such grinding, or swarf from metalworking.
- The flower beds were white with grit from sand blasting the flagstone walkways.
 - Sand or a sand–salt mixture spread on wet and, especially, icy roads and footpaths to improve traction.
 
- Small, hard, inedible particles in food.
- These cookies seem to have grit from nutshells in them.
 
- A measure of the relative coarseness of an abrasive material such as sandpaper, the smaller the number the coarser the abrasive.
- I need a sheet of 100 grit sandpaper.
 
- (geology) A hard, coarse-grained siliceous sandstone; gritstone. Also, a finer sharp-grained sandstone, e.g., grindstone grit.
- Strength of mind; great courage or fearlessness; fortitude.
- That kid with the cast on his arm has the grit to play dodgeball.
 - 1861, Charles Reade, The Cloister and the Hearth; or, Maid, Wife, and Widow. A Matter-of-Fact Romance., New York, N.Y.: Rudd & Carleton; London: Trübner & Co.:- They came to a rising ground , not sharp , but long ; and here youth and grit and sober living told more than ever.
 
- 1880, Edwin Percy Whipple, Success and Its Conditions:- If you are overcome by a man of grit, he insolently makes you conscious of your own weakness
 
- 1941 April, “Notes and News: Railwaymen and Snow”, in Railway Magazine, page 178:- Although working under very unpleasant conditions they never grumbled, and to the end showed continuous grit; and in addition to this several examples of sheer heroism were displayed.
 
- 2015 April 15, Jonathan Martin, “For a Clinton, it’s not hard to be humble in an effort to regain power”, in The New York Times, archived from the original on 6 September 2015:- But what their admirers call grit and critics deem shamelessness can overshadow another essential element of the Clinton school: a willingness to put on the hair shirt of humility to regain power.
 
 
Derived terms
    
Related terms
    
Translations
    
collection of hard materials
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inedible particles in food
measure of coarseness
strength of mind
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See also
    
Verb
    
grit (third-person singular simple present grits, present participle gritting, simple past and past participle gritted or (nonstandard) grit)
- Apparently only in grit one's teeth: to clench, particularly in reaction to pain or anger.
- We had no choice but to grit our teeth and get on with it.
- He has a sleeping disorder and grits his teeth.
 
- To cover with grit.
- (obsolete, intransitive) To give forth a grating sound, like sand under the feet; to grate; to grind.
- 1767, Oliver Goldsmith, The Hermit
- The sanded |floor that grits beneath the tread.
 
 
- 1767, Oliver Goldsmith, The Hermit
Derived terms
    
Translations
    
to clench
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Etymology 2
    
From Middle English *gryt (“bran, chaff”), from Old English grytt, from Proto-West Germanic *gruti (“coarsely ground bits”), ablaut variant of Proto-Indo-European *gʰrewd-. See above. Doublet of goetta.
Noun
    
grit (plural grits)
Translations
    
husked but unground oats
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Elfdalian
    
    
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