A verb to describe someone who is ugly but has major swag. Someone who isn't very good looking but has a good sense of style.
Gideon: "Yo Mohamed, you see that chick over there in the pink?"
Mohamed: "The one with the skirt? Yeah bro she's hot as hell!"
Gideon: "Nah dude. She's gromky.
Mohamed: "Oh yeah. You're right."
Mohamed: "The one with the skirt? Yeah bro she's hot as hell!"
Gideon: "Nah dude. She's gromky.
Mohamed: "Oh yeah. You're right."
by Swag_Monsta July 24, 2011
Get the Gromky mug.Alternate spelling of grok.
To thoroughly understand something through the metaphorical process of drinking it in.
To thoroughly understand something through the metaphorical process of drinking it in.
"I've taken calculus four times, and I still don't grock it."
"If you really groked a Stranger in a Strange Land, you wouldn't spell it 'grock'"
"If you really groked a Stranger in a Strange Land, you wouldn't spell it 'grock'"
by Team Andy July 17, 2007
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grocky • grock • glocky • grockle • gronky • grocking • gricky • grockel • grockle box • Grockococklion
Noun; Devonian term for anyone from outside Devon, particularly Tourists. Often used in an insulting or derogitary manner.
by Steve Bush March 16, 2004
Get the grockel mug.A holidaymaker, or one from out of town. Particularly used in the South of England, generally as a mildly derogatory term.
by Darren Jones December 29, 2003
Get the grockle mug.the feeling you get waking up after camping; or waking up after a particularly long hard night of partying. commonly known to be caused by lack of sleep.
by veevla October 8, 2008
Get the Grucky mug.A holiday maker, but one from outside the local vicinity, i.e. someone holidaying in Christchurch who's from Southampton isn't a grockle. Term used on the south coast and has spread eastwards, stopping at Southampton water. Most commonly heard in the solent town of Lymington where it's used as an insult towards ignorant and usually posh tourists, those with caravans, those with five kids, a dog and granddad tagging along and those that have been coming to the town for twenty years and think they know/own the place. Most commonly heard amongst fed-up shopworkers and working-class locals. Tends not to be applied to foreign tourists as these generally tend to be considerate people when travelling and don't make a nuisance of themselves.
by I Love Tarquin November 13, 2007
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