Are the words grip, gripe and grab related? Let’s find out.
Grip [ˈɡɹɪp] means to take hold (of), particularly with the hand, a hold or way of holding, particularly with the hand, and various other things. It comes from Middle English grippen (to grip, grab onto, steal), from Old English grippan (to seize, grip), from Proto-Germanic *gripjaną (to grip, hold on to), from *grīpaną (to grab, grasp), from Proto-Indo-European *gʰrebʰ- (to seize, grab, dig, rake) [source].
Gripe [ɡɹaɪp] means to complain, to whine, to annoy, to bother, a complaint, often a petty or trivial one, and so on. Like grip, it comes from Middle English grippen (to grip, grab onto, steal), etc [source].
So grip and gripe are related. What about grab?
Grab [ˈɡɹæb], which means to grip suddenly, to seize, to clutch, and so on, comes from Middle Dutch grabben or Middle Low German grabben (to grasp, grab, seize, snatch), from Old Saxon gravan (to dig), from Proto-West Germanic *grabbōn, form Proto-Germanic *grabōną (to gather, rake), from Proto-Indo-European *gʰrebʰ- (to seize, grab, dig, rake) [source].
So grip, gripe and grab are probably related.
Other words from the same roots include grasp, grave, groove, grope, grovel, grub and engrave in English, grijpen (to grab) and begrijpen (to understand) in Dutch, greifen (to grab, grasp, grip) in German, griffer (to scratch) in French, grabar (to record, engrave) in Spanish, gribe (to catch, seize, grab, grasp, grip) in Danish, grabić (to rake, rob, plunder) in Polish, and greim (to grip, hold, bite, stitch) in Irish [source].
