spruce
2
[ sproos ]
/ sprus /
adjective, spruc·er, spruc·est.
trim in dress or appearance; neat; smart; dapper.
verb (used with object), spruced, spruc·ing.
to make spruce or smart (often followed by up): Spruce up the children before the company comes.
verb (used without object), spruced, spruc·ing.
to make oneself spruce (usually followed by up).
Origin of spruce
2
1580–90; obsolete
spruce jerkin orig., jerkin made of
spruce leather, i.e., leather imported from Prussia (see
spruce1), hence fine, smart, etc.
OTHER WORDS FROM spruce
spruce·ly, adverb spruce·ness, noun un·spruced, adjectiveWords nearby spruce
Definition for spruce up (2 of 2)
spruce-up
[ sproos-uhp ]
/ ˈsprusˌʌp /
noun
an act of cleaning up, refurbishing, renovating, or the like.
Origin of spruce-up
noun use of verb phrase
spruce up
British Dictionary definitions for spruce up (1 of 3)
spruce up
verb
(adverb)
to make (oneself, a person, or thing) smart and neat
British Dictionary definitions for spruce up (2 of 3)
spruce
1
/ (spruːs) /
noun
any coniferous tree of the N temperate genus Picea, cultivated for timber and for ornament: family Pinaceae. They grow in a pyramidal shape and have needle-like leaves and light-coloured wood
See also Norway spruce, blue spruce, white spruce, black spruce
the wood of any of these trees
Word Origin for spruce
C17: short for
Spruce fir, from C14
Spruce Prussia, changed from
Pruce, via Old French from Latin
Prussia
British Dictionary definitions for spruce up (3 of 3)
spruce
2
/ (spruːs) /
adjective
neat, smart, and trim
Derived forms of spruce
sprucely, adverb spruceness, nounWord Origin for spruce
C16: perhaps from
Spruce leather a fashionable leather imported from Prussia; see
spruce
1
Idioms and Phrases with spruce up
spruce up
Make neat and trim, as in She spruced up the chairs with new cushions. This idiom originated in the late 1500s as simply spruce but had acquired up by 1676.