Definitions For Grockle
Noun
GROCKLE (plural GROCKLEs) (slang, British, various parts of the, _, West Country) A tourist from elsewhere in the countryUsage notes
In more recent times it has spread to other parts of the south coast and indeed elsewhere, including the former colonies of Northern and Southern Rhodesia as a term for a foreigner. The term is widely used in devon and other areas of rural England where it refers to tourists or people recently relocated from elsewhere; it is a mildly derogatory. Climbers in England & Wales use it as a dismissive term for less serious visitors to upland areas. On snowdon in North Wales the two easiest walking routes to the summit (along side the railway and the PYG Track) have each been referred to informally as the Grockle Track. The word was imported to the Isle of Man in 1970 by Capt McKenzie who had learned the word in Plymouth. Commonly referred to tourists in cars who can be easily identified because all Manx number plates have either MN or MAN in them.Derived terms
grockle art, pictures for selling to grockles grockle bait, cheap arcades grockle box and grockle shell, caravan grockle can, a tourist bus grockle catcher, an easy to reach beach or beauty spot which acts to stop tourists finding other local spots grockle fodder, fish and chips grockle nest, a holiday home or second home grockle-ridden, full of grocklesSee also
emmet overner, similar term used by residents of the Isle of Wight to refer to both tourists and mainland Britons in generalAlternative forms
grockelEtymology
The origin of the word is uncertain. A derivation has been suggested from the eponymous dragon-like creature in the obsolete w:the dandy, the dandy comic strip "Jimmy and his Grockle", based on an earlier strip, "Jimmy Johnson's Grockle", in w:the rover (story paper), the rover comic in the 1920s, somehow leading to use in the present sense in the movie The System (1964). It is doubtful that the word's use in the West of England goes back farther than that. at lexico.com; at fandom.com Eric Partridge's A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English also refers to the film The System but suggests another derivation, that holiday visitors in Torbay were compared to little clowns, and w:grock, grock (1880–1959) was a famous clown at the time."Grockle", in Eric Partridge, A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English (Routledge, 2006),Anagrams
grockelIs Grockle a Scrabble Word?
Words With Friends
YES
Scrabble US
NO
Scrabble UK
YES
English International (SOWPODS)
YES
Scrabble Global
YES
Enable1 Dictionary
NO
Points in Different Games
Scrabble
14
Words with Friends
17
The word Grockle is worth 14 points in Scrabble and 17 points in Words with Friends