trimmen

Etymology
Ca. 1900, from, from. The sense “work out” perhaps after the English expression. This sense appears simultaneously in Dutch and German in the later 1960s, so one may have borrowed it from the other.

Verb

 * 1) to work out, especially to jog
 * 2) to trim the hair of a dog or a horse

Etymology
Late 19th century, at first in nautical parlance, from, from. For the sense “work out” compare the Dutch entry above.

Verb

 * 1)  to trim
 * 2) to trim (a dog's hair, a man's beard, etc.)
 * 3)  to give the appearance, look or air (of); to decorate (as); to make (someone/something) up (as)
 * 4)  to drill or condition
 * 5)  to work out, to keep oneself physically fit through exercise
 * 1)  to work out, to keep oneself physically fit through exercise