(n.) One who gropes; one who feels his way in the dark, or searches by feeling.
Example Sentences:
(1) If there is a man who is unpleasant, who is a creep and a groper, then it's generally an abuse of power.
(2) Or we say there have always been muggers and gropers, they’re only global news when they’re not white.
(3) As a fugitive paedophile, Polanski had no good name to besmirch, particularly when the alleged besmirching consisted of the accusation that he was a groper.
(4) I was groped on the bus in London and clearly said what was happening, and everybody else looked out the window - not one person stood up to help me, or sent the message to the groper that this was not socially acceptable, and that he would be challenged.
(5) Instead, the Republican nominee blurted out four words: “That makes me smart.” For once Trump – serial liar and alleged serial groper – had inadvertently revealed a great truth.
(6) But George Osborne is reportedly dedicated to ensuring a male succession and the Lib Dems deserve credit from all anti-feminists, not just for rallying round one notorious, but senior, groper against his numerous female accusers, but for Clegg’s unblemished success rate in keeping Lib Dem women out of the cabinet.
(7) They sought only to uphold the law: to remind other women of their right to travel unmolested, gropers that they must keep their hands off, and police that they should arrest offenders.
(8) Are naked breasts, Murdoch puzzles aloud, still as potent a marketing tool as they were in 1969 when the BBC's high-ranking gropers were learning their various trades, and he began grooming tabloid readers with risqué glamour shots?
(9) Facebook Twitter Pinterest And while Ed Miliband – who last week taunted David Cameron over his all-male front bench – can pride himself on having more women in his top team than any other leader, his party is not without its gropers and its bullies and its unreconstructed chauvinists, all nursing their bitter little knots of resentment.
(10) When someone is a bigot or a racist, it's zero tolerance, but there is clearly a high level of tolerance around being a groper.
(11) Having never thought to be interesting, interested, funny, kind, the groper presumes that he's taking some shortcut to intimacy.
(12) One piece of evidence not presented to the jury in Rolf Harris's trial illustrates with grim eloquence, in retrospect, the prosecution notion that the veteran entertainer was a man of two distinct sides: the avuncular and trustworthy public figure, and lurking behind, the groper and abuser.In 1985 – when, the court heard, Rolf Harris was still assaulting women and was still having an occasional sexual relationship with his daughter's best friend – he fronted an educational video to warn young people about the dangers of sexual abuse.
Grouper
Definition:
(n.) One of several species of valuable food fishes of the genus Epinephelus, of the family Serranidae, as the red grouper, or brown snapper (E. morio), and the black grouper, or warsaw (E. nigritus), both from Florida and the Gulf of Mexico.
(n.) The tripletail (Lobotes).
(n.) In California, the name is often applied to the rockfishes.
(2) It soon became a standard text for aspiring Young Conservatives and Bow Groupers in the days before the Thatcherite tide had engulfed even those institutions.
(3) "There are some friends in the first few Groupers that are still couples, together almost two years later from that.
(4) Barracuda should never be eaten, and travelers should exercise caution when considering other fish dishes, notably, grouper and red snapper.
(5) Equilibrium dialysis studies employing epsilon-dinitrophenyl-amino caproic acid were conducted with purified grouper antibodies specific for DNP.
(6) Smeeters Smeeters A French site now available in the UK that is not unlike Grouper.
(7) The Q-sort items were ranked very similarly for Helpfulness in the group experience by the growth groupers and by Yalom's successful group psychotherapy outpatients.
(8) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Grappling with grouper … diving off Garajau beach I tried scuba-diving from Garajau beach in Caniço; the clear water of this protected marine reserve is teeming with big, friendly mero (grouper) and surprisingly tropical-looking fish, such as rainbow wrasse and damsel fish.
(9) The temperature dependency of protein synthesis was studied in vivo in five species of Pacific fish collected in the Galapagos and Perlas Islands: batfish (Ogcocephalus darwini), groupers (Epinephelus labriformis), catfish (Netuma platypogan), puffers (Arothron hispidus) and triggerfish (Sufflamen verres).
(10) Although the AVG grouper works under limited conditions, important questions remain concerning its validity and usefulness.
(11) From giant grouper to tiny eels that inhabit the anuses of sea cucumbers, its creatures amaze the thousands who visit it each year, as well as the millions who watch it virtually through nature documentaries.
(12) Other notable events caught on camera this week include – a grouper eating a 4ft shark in one gigantic bite and a crocodile chasing a swimmer to shore.
(13) The giant grouper, Epinephelus itaira, was shown to synthesize 16 and 6.4S antibodies specific for the dinitrophenyl determinant (DNP).
(14) Confirmed ciguatera poisoning is reported in three Canadian adults who ingested grouper imported from Florida.
(15) Blood stages, similar to C-blood protozoans observed from freshwater fish in Europe, were found from peripheral blood smears of grouper.
(16) Suspected fish included grouper, red snapper, and amberjack.
(17) Studies on the thermodynamic parameters of the hapten-antibody interaction showed the grouper 16 and 6.4S antibodies to be similar to each other.
(18) "There are some basics: you know that when you go to a Grouper that there are going to be three people there, and they've been screened and matched to you manually.
(19) Rolling out city by city makes matchmaking easier, but it means that only a tiny portion of the UK and US can use the site so far; and along similar lines, it has only become large enough to support same-sex Groupers in a few American cities.
(20) is described from grouper, Epinephelus malabaricus, in cage-cultured and wild fish collected from both coastal lines of southern Thailand.