## Growl
**growl** (*v., n.*) — to emit a low, guttural, threatening sound from the throat; to speak in a low, angry tone.
### Middle English and Early Modern English
The verb surfaces in Middle English as *groulen*, attested from the late fourteenth century, carrying from its earliest appearances the dual sense of an animal's threat-sound and the rumbling of an angry belly or storm. The form is closely related to *grollen*, *grullen*, recorded in Middle Low German and Middle Dutch, all sharing the characteristic *gr-* onset that marks the whole Germanic family of friction-words.
By the sixteenth century the word had settled into its modern English form. Its sister *groan* — already ancient in Old English as *grānian* — was seeded from the same phonaesthetic soil, and the two have been companions in the language ever since: *groan* tends toward the sustained exhalation of pain or sorrow, *growl* toward the clipped, threatening vibration of animal or anger. They are *gr-* siblings.
### Proto-Germanic and the *gr-* Root
Behind Middle English *groulen* stands a Proto-Germanic stem reconstructed as *\*grū-* or *\*grull-*, denoting the grinding, rumbling resonance produced in the throat or chest. This stem belongs to one of the most productive phonaesthetic clusters in the Germanic languages: **gr-**, which consistently marks sounds, sensations, and substances associated with friction, harshness, and grinding contact.
The family is vast. *Groan*, *growl*, *grumble*, *grunt*, *grate*, *grit*, *gravel*, *grind* — every one carries a harsh, abrasive, or low-friction quality. *Gravel* and *grit* are physical substances defined by their rough, grinding texture. *Grate* is the action of one hard surface dragged against another. *Grind* is the sustained reduction of a thing
Jacob Grimm, working through the vast lexical archive of the *Deutsches Wörterbuch*, was alert to precisely these clusters. He understood that sound-symbolism was an organic feature of the language, evidence of how early speakers mapped the textures of the world onto the phonological resources of their tongues.
### Proto-Indo-European *ghreu-*
The Proto-Germanic root connects to the Proto-Indo-European base *\*ghreu-*, meaning *to rub, to grind*. The same root yields Sanskrit *ghṛṇóti* (grinds, rubs) and Greek *khraíō* (to graze, to touch the surface of). The semantic arc is consistent: at its origin the root names physical friction. In the Germanic daughter languages this physical sense extended into the acoustic domain. The grinding of surfaces produces
### German *grollen*
The most vivid witness to the word's full range is German **grollen**, which preserves both the acoustic and the emotional dimensions. *Grollen* means, on the one hand, to rumble — specifically the rolling, sustained thunder of a retreating storm. The classic literary formula is **'der Donner grollt'**: *the thunder growls*. Here the word names the deep, vibrating resonance
On the other hand, *grollen* means to bear a grudge — a sullen, smoldering resentment that has not broken into open quarrel. *Jemandem grollen* is to harbour low, sustained anger against someone, the emotional equivalent of that same rumbling storm. The connection is exact: both senses name something low, persistent, and threatening that has not yet erupted. The dog that growls has not
The semantic overlap between the animal's growl and the rumble of thunder is ancient. Both are low-frequency, sustained vibrations perceived as warnings from a powerful source. Early speakers made no sharp distinction: the thunder *growls* because it behaves as a threatening creature behaves. This metaphorical bridge is embedded in the word's history
### Survival
The word has thrived. Its range has expanded: machines growl, engines growl, music can growl. The phonaesthetic cluster that gave it life continues to attract new applications. As long as speakers of English reach for *gr-* to name anything harsh, low, grinding, or threatening, *growl* sits at the centre of that semantic field.