gumph
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]Unknown.
Alternative forms
[edit]Noun
[edit]gumph (countable and uncountable, plural gumphs)
- A foolish person; a gump.
- 1825, John Jamieson, Supplement to the Etymological dictionary of the Scottish language:
- Gump, a numscull.
- 1860, Susan Warner, Anna Bartlett Warner, Say and Seal, page 246:
- Drossy saw ’em in her drawer, and for all the gumph he is, he knew the writing; and I made him get ’em for me this morning while they were at breakfast.
- 1919, St. John Greer Ervine, John Ferguson:
- He strikes me as the perfect example of an intellectual gumph. He knows too much!
- 1938, George Smith, The Cornhill Magazine, page 816:
- ‘ Tell them what, you gumph ? ’ cried Squibs. ‘ Are you all mad ? ’
- 1971, Ronald Hayman, John Gielgud, New York: Random House:
- If Romeo were just a lovesick gumph, occasionally falling into a deeper trance in which he speaks unaccountable poetry, then Olivier is your Romeo.
- (uncountable, slang) Nonsense.
- 1998 December 15, T.C. Van Adler, St. Agatha's Breast: A Novel, St. Martin's Press, →ISBN:
- Things had not been going will with Pino ever since he started to take Sister Apollonia’s bloated gumph as gospel. Thanks to the wacko, his man was actually getting a Christ complex.
- 2000 April, Linda Grant, Remind Me Who I Am, Again, Granta Books, New Ed edition (July), →ISBN, page 266
- ‘It’s like listening to adolescent daughters with all their gumph and they’re going to chew you out...’
- 2003 June 6, Chris Wooding, Crashing, Scholastic Point, Scholastic Paperbacks (November), →ISBN, pages 100-101
- Between a couple of silent factories, beat-box music drifted over to us. Some kind of unrecognizable chart gumph; the usual mix of soul and rap.
Etymology 2
[edit]Shortening of gumption.
Alternative forms
[edit]Noun
[edit]gumph (uncountable)
- (uncountable) Gumption; grit.
- a. 1923, Violet Hunt, The Coach:
- Never lifted a hand to defend himself, hadn’t got any gumph.
- 1955, Mathematics Teaching, Association of Teachers of Mathematics
- ...anyone likely to use the book would surely have enough gumph to try both before giving up.
Etymology 3
[edit]From Scots [Term?].
Alternative forms
[edit]Verb
[edit]gumph (third-person singular simple present gumphs, present participle gumphing, simple past and past participle gumphed)
- (intransitive) To grope, especially after fish.
- (transitive, used with out) To catch fish by groping.
References
[edit]- “gumph”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
- “gumph”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.