The word appeared in English as
grome c.1225, meaning "boy child,
boy,
youth". Its origin is unknown; it has no known cognates in other Germanic languages (e.g. Dutch and German use compound terms, such as
Stal(l)knecht 'stable servant', or equivalents of synonyms mentioned below). Perhaps, it stems from an Old English root
groma, related to
growan "grow" or from Old French
grommet "servant" (compare Medieval English
gromet for "ship's boy", recorded since 1229). The word was originally rather grander in status, as in
bridegroom and the socially-elevated offices in the English
Royal Household of: •
Groom of the Chamber, or of the Privy Chamber •
Groom of the Robes •
Groom of the Stool The meaning "man servant who attends to horses" is from 1667 although women and girls are often grooms. The verb is first attested in 1809; the transferred sense of "to tidy (oneself) up" is from 1843; and the figurative sense of "to prepare a candidate" is from 1887, originally in U.S. politics. File:Assyrian grooms and horses, from Nimrud, Iraq. The British Museum.jpg|
Assyrian grooms and horses, from
Nimrud, Iraq. The British Museum. File:Tri-coloured pottery horse and groom. Tang dynasty.jpg|Tri-coloured pottery horse and groom.
Tang dynasty 618-907 CE. Shaanxi History Museum,
Xi'an, China. File:Payk groom, in Zafarnama 1436 (folio 250r).jpg|A
payk groom in the
Timurid Zafarnama of 1436. ==Job==