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Grumble   /grˈəmbəl/   Listen
Grumble

verb
(past & past part. grunbled; pres. part. grumbling)
1.
Show one's unhappiness or critical attitude.  Synonyms: grouch, scold.  "We grumbled about the increased work load"
2.
Make complaining remarks or noises under one's breath.  Synonyms: croak, gnarl, murmur, mutter.
3.
To utter or emit low dull rumbling sounds.  Synonyms: growl, rumble.  "Stones grumbled down the cliff"
4.
Make a low noise.  Synonym: rumble.
noun
1.
A loud low dull continuous noise.  Synonyms: grumbling, rumble, rumbling.
2.
A complaint uttered in a low and indistinct tone.  Synonyms: grumbling, murmur, murmuring, mutter, muttering.



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"Grumble" Quotes from Famous Books



... now along toward the middle of the afternoon. Far off in the distance somewhere, an action was certainly going on, for the grumble of heavy cannonading came ...
— The Boy Scouts on Belgian Battlefields • Lieut. Howard Payson

... the kind-hearted woman, "what ails thee? Cheer up, man, and finish thy collop. Thou mayest fret about it as thou likes, but thou cannot undo a bad stitch by wishing. If it will make thee better for time to come, though, I'll not grumble. Come, come, goodman, if one collop winna content thee, I wish we'd two, ...
— Traditions of Lancashire, Volume 2 (of 2) • John Roby

... another's haunches most ferociously. The drivers immediately separate them, for the bite is dangerous to their health, and often attended with serious mischief to the animal bitten. But I have never yet seen a camel kick or attack a man. They invariably grumble and growl, sometimes most piteously, when they are being loaded, as if deprecating the heavy burden about to be placed upon them, and appealing to the mercy of their masters. The merchants pay 13½ Tunisian piastres per cantar for goods now conveyed from Ghadames to Ghat. The Touaricks ...
— Travels in the Great Desert of Sahara, in the Years of 1845 and 1846 • James Richardson

... grumble at Harry's presence, and she cooked Jim appetising suppers as of old and she even spoke pleasantly to Harry. Jim fondly imagined that she was becoming as devoted to the bright, engaging little fellow as he was himself, and he could not know that in his absence hard words ...
— The Girls of St. Olave's • Mabel Mackintosh

... serious with me, and they offered an excellent excuse for my sudden departure. It didn't come to my mind that the white spots might have been the cause of my sudden longing for my own little pink room. I simply knew I wanted to go home; and wake up in the morning cross and disagreeable; and grumble about the bacon and coffee at the breakfast ...
— The Fifth Wheel - A Novel • Olive Higgins Prouty


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