ambass
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Irregular back-formation from ambassador.
Verb
[edit]ambass (third-person singular simple present ambasses, present participle ambassing, simple past and past participle ambassed)
- (humorous, nonstandard) To engage in the professional work of an ambassador.
- 1913, John Kendrick Bangs, "To Marse Tom and Meh Lady", The Bookman, Volume XXXVIII, page 114:
- How fruitless attempts to involve us in war With HIM to AMBASS and with HER to ADOR.
- 1917, John Kendrick Bangs, Half hours with the Idiot, Little, Brown, and Company, page 4:
- The home of an American Ambassador should express America not the country to which he is sent to Ambass.
- 1914,, Association men, Volume 39, YMCA of the USA, page 361
- Politics, graft, war, sport and scandal are aired in turn, but the "ambassador" fails to ambass — the "worker" fails to work — the "messenger" makes a mess of it.
- 1961, Ilka Chase, The Carthaginian rose, Doubleday, page 51:
- ... cut off from their governments and obliged to rely on their own wisdom, knowledge and experience, when they had, in a word, to ambass. Nowadays they pick up the phone and the State Department, for better or worse, tells then what to do.
- 2001, Peter David, The Rift (2001) (Star Trek: The Original Series Book 57), Simon & Schuster, →ISBN, page 161
- "Therefore," said Kirk, […] "Shipping her back in box is not one of the options, […] this will require the skills of an Ambassador. So you're going to have to […] Ambass."
Translations
[edit]to engage in the professional work of an ambassador
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