A person who grooms animals, preparing them for shows or sale; or a person who prepares children for abuse (in a harmful context).
From groom (to clean and prepare) plus the agent suffix -er. The word has broadened from animal care to human grooming, then acquired serious negative connotations in modern usage.
The word 'groomer' shows how the same term can describe someone helping a prize-winning dog and someone committing serious harm—context matters enormously in language.
The term 'groomer' in contemporary usage refers to predatory behavior and carries masculine-coded criminal associations in popular discourse, though predatory grooming occurs across genders. Media coverage has historically emphasized male groomers while underreporting female perpetrators, creating asymmetric public perception.
Use 'groomer' to describe the behavior regardless of perpetrator gender, and ensure reporting/awareness avoids gendered stereotypes about who engages in grooming.
["predator (if context permits)","perpetrator of grooming"]
Research on grooming by women in institutional contexts (teachers, coaches, clergy) has been historically underreported; accurate terminology helps surface suppressed victim accounts.
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