Noun
every time he begged off a night at the pub—saying he had to study—his mates teased him for being a swot
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Noun
The Oxbridge and Ivy League colleges traditionally had disparaging terms for students who worked too hard and devoted themselves too diligently to learning: swot in England, grind in the United States.—John McIntyre, The Christian Science Monitor, 31 July 2023 So, swot up, then delegate.—Barnaby Lashbrooke, Forbes, 4 May 2021
Verb
Yamada Jun, the IT expert, became the CEO and travelled to Germany to swot up on renewables.—The Economist, 13 June 2020 Greenblatt might want to have a chinwag with some of his colleagues in the history department and swot up the biography of someone like Wisconsin’s Robert La Follette, a progressive populist politician perhaps more to his liking.—Alex Beam, BostonGlobe.com, 2 May 2018
Word History
Etymology
Noun
English dialect, sweat, from Middle English swot, from Old English swāt — more at sweat
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