Curiously enough, Marvel Groot is first, having appeared in 1960, while the Moorcock novel is from 1981.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groot
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_War_Hound_and_the_World%27s_Pain
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Curiously enough, Marvel Groot is first, having appeared in 1960, while the Moorcock novel is from 1981.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groot
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_War_Hound_and_the_World%27s_Pain
Huh.
I had no idea Marvel Groot was that old.
That seems to make it more likely that it's not a coincidence though, particularly since while Marvel Groot existed, he was still very obscure. I can see Moorcock slipping the line in, and even giving the character that name so he could slip the line in, just for a bit of amusement.
"Groot" is also the Dutch cognate to the English word "great".
There are plenty of Dutch words and names that are close enough to English to sound really funny to English-speakers. Like, Vroom is a real Dutch surname, but to American kids that's the sound a cool car makes.
(In one of the Baroque Cycle books, Neal Stephenson needed a name for a Dutch shipwright who built really fast sailing ships. Who else could it be but Jan Vroom?)