drove
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 9
- Words With Friends
- 10
- Letters
- 5
See all 2 pronunciations Show less
Definition of drove
11 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included
noun
- A cattle drive or the herd being driven by it; thus, a number of cattle driven to market or new pastures.
See all 11 definitions Show less
noun
- A cattle drive or the herd being driven by it; thus, a number of cattle driven to market or new pastures.
-
(broadly, figuratively, plural-normally)A large number of people on the move.
“in droves”
- (collective)A group of hares.
- A road or track along which cattle are habitually, used to be or could be driven; a droveway.
- A narrow drain or channel used in the irrigation of land.
- A broad chisel used to bring stone to a nearly smooth surface.
- The grooved surface of stone finished by the drove chisel.
verb
-
(form-of, past)simple past of drive
“I had occasion […] to make a somewhat long business trip to Chicago, and on my return […] I found Farrar awaiting me in the railway station. He smiled his wonted fraction by way of greeting, […], and finally leading me to his buggy, turned and drove out of town.”
“Iron and coal were the magnets that drew railways to this land of lovely valleys and silent mountains—for such it was a century-and-a-half ago, before man blackened the valleys with the smoke of his forges, scarred the green hills with his shafts and waste-heaps, and drove the salmon from the quiet Rhondda and the murmuring Taff.”
-
(dialectal, form-of, participle, past)past participle of drive
“Not the Horn-Plague, but something worse, Had drove the frighted Cucks from thence.”
“Then, being on his knees between my thighs, he drew up his ſhirt, and bared all his hairy thighs, and ſtiff ſtaring truncheon, red-topt, and rooted into a thicket of curls, which cover’d his belly to his navel, and gave it the air of a fleſh-bruſh: and ſoon I felt it joining cloſe to mine, when he had drove the nail up to the head, and left no partition but the intermediate hair on both ſides.”
“We are appealing to any individuals who "have" drove that road who may well have [...]”
-
To herd cattle; particularly over a long distance.
“He's droving now with Conroy's sheep along the Castlereagh.”
“He was droving his mob of fats to Derby, to ship by the southern boat for Fremantle.”
- (transitive)To finish (stone) with a drove chisel.
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
From Middle English drove, drof, draf, from Old English drāf (“action of driving; a driving out, expulsion; drove, herd, band; company, band; road along which cattle are driven”), from Proto-Germanic…
See full etymology Show less
From Middle English drove, drof, draf, from Old English drāf (“action of driving; a driving out, expulsion; drove, herd, band; company, band; road along which cattle are driven”), from Proto-Germanic *draibō (“a drive, push, movement, drove”), from Proto-Indo-European *dʰreybʰ- (“to drive, push”). Cognate with Scots drave, dreef (“drove, crowd”), Dutch dreef (“a walkway, wide road with trees, drove”), Middle High German treip (“a drove”), Swedish drev (“a drive, drove”), Icelandic dreif (“a scattering, distribution”). More at drive.
Words you can make from drove
26 playable · top: ROVED (9 pts)
Best play roved 9 points4-letter words
7 words3-letter words
10 words2-letter words
8 wordsHooks
3 extensions · 3 back
A single letter you can add to drove to make another valid word.
Find your best play with drove
See every word you can make from a set of letters that includes drove, or browse word lists you can mine for high-scoring plays.