gronk
English
Etymology 1
References
"gronk" in The Macquarie Dictionary Online
Etymology 2
Imitative.
Verb
gronk (third-person singular simple present gronks, present participle gronking, simple past and past participle gronked)
- (computing, slang, intransitive) Of a floppy disk drive: to produce mechanical sounds of operation.
- 1990, Compute, volume 12, numbers 1-5, page 62:
- They say a good detective always starts at the beginning, so I installed the program on my VGA PC's hard drive. As the computer gronked away, copying six 5¼-inch floppies, I wondered why, if bad detectives start at the end, […]
- 1993, Iris Forrest, Computer Tales of Fact and Fantasy:
- […] a disk drive gronked, her screen bloomed, and suddenly there was an icon in the upper right corner.
- 1994, Bryan Pfaffenberger, I Hate PCs:
- The next startup event is the computer's attempt to read a disk in drive A. But, there is no disk in drive A, remember? You were supposed to remove any disk in this drive. So, you hear a lot of pathetic gronking and grakking until the computer gives up […]
- (computing, slang, intransitive, rare) To fail; to crash or go wrong.
- 1992, Charlottesville Computer Users' Group: CCUG:
- Repeats the last 40 lines of IRC output, in case your terminal gronked.
- 2010, Steven Levy, Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution (25th Anniversary Edition)
- The other faction centered on […] what went on under the [model railway] layout. This was The System, […] and it was constantly being improved, revamped, perfected, and sometimes "gronked"—in club jargon, screwed up.
Etymology 3
Onomatopoeic
Noun
gronk (plural gronks)
- The cry of a raven.
- Synonym: quork
- 2021, David Reed, Raven Queen, Rise, unnumbered page:
- My raven launched himself into the dark above with a gronk of amusement.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:gronk.
Verb
gronk (third-person singular simple present gronks, present participle gronking, simple past and past participle gronked)
- To make a gronking sound.
- Synonym: quork
- 2017, Robert Michael Pyle, Where Bigfoot Walks: Crossing the Dark Divide, unnumbered page:
- The rush of water behind me, the soft drip from the trees, ravens gronking far off—these were the only sounds I heard.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:gronk.
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