Gaums vs Gaumy - What's the difference?
gaums | gaumy |
(gaum)
Heed; attention.
* 1862 , C. Clough Robinson, The Dialect of Leeds and its Neighbourhood, Illustrated , page 18:
* 1919 , Ethel Carnie Holdsworth, The Taming of Nan , page 31:
* 1972 , William Mayne, The Incline (ISBN 0525325506), page 141:
(dialectal, obsolete) To understand; comprehend; consider.
* 1893 , Keighley Snowden, Tales of the Yorkshire Wolds , page 171:
* 1896 , James Keighley Snowden, Web of an Old Weaver'', quoted in ''The English Dialect Dictionary (1900 edition):
* 1870 , John Christopher Atkinson, Lost'', quoted in ''The English Dialect Dictionary (1900 edition):
(rfv-sense) (dialectal) To pay attention to; take note of; notice.
(rfv-sense) (dialectal) To fear.
(rfv-sense) (US, and, UK, dialects, Northern England, Appalachia) To handle improperly.
* (rfdate) Jonathan Swift, Polite Conversation :
(US, and, UK, dialects, chiefly, South Midlands, Southern US, Appalachia) To smear.
* 1894 , Rowland Evans Robinson, Danvis Folks'', chapter VI, ''The Paring-Bee , page 117:
* Mark Twain, Little Bessie'', published in 1972 in ''Mark Twain's Fables of Man :
* 1930 , Marietta Minnigerode Andrews, Memoirs of a Poor Relation: Being the Story of a Post-war Southern Girl and Her Battle with Destiny , page 293:
* 1990 , Appalachian Journal , volume 18, page 196:
* (seemoreCites)
Grime.
* 1913 , William Gerard Chapman, Wine of the Orchard'', in ''Outing: Sport, Adventure, Travel Fiction , volume 61, page 210:
* 1927 , Robert Lindsay Mason'', ''The lure of the Great Smokies , page 150:
* 2000 , Howard Bahr, The Black Flower: A Novel of the Civil War (ISBN 0312265077), page 106:
A bit, a small amount.
* 1939 , Esquire , volume 12, issues 1-3, page 54:
* 1978 , Editorials on File , volume 9, issue 2, page 1392:
* 1990 , Donald Harington, The Cockroaches of Stay More (ISBN 0679728082), page 191:
A useless person.
* 1947 , James Reynolds, A world of horses: A conversation piece , page 229:
* 1956 , Sean O'Casey, I knock at the door. Pictures in the hallway. [etc] , page 133:
* 2011 , Liam O'Flaherty, Land (ISBN 1448203880):
(to make a mess of).
* 2005 , Charles Ray, The Tarheel Connection: An Environmental Romance (ISBN 094461969X), page 93:
* 2011 , Caroline Miller, Lamb in His Bosom (ISBN 1561456497), page 206:
(US, and, UK, dialects) Sticky; smeared with something sticky.
* 1914 , Edwin Markham, Children in Bondage: A Complete and Careful Presentation :
* 1916 , Don Marquis, Hermione and Her Little Group of Serious Thinkers , page 164:
* 1946 , Jessie Scott, The Charity Ball , page 259:
As a verb gaums
is (gaum).As an adjective gaumy is
(us|and|uk|dialects) sticky; smeared with something sticky.gaums
English
Verb
(head)Anagrams
* *gaum
English
Etymology 1
The noun is from dialectal (etyl) (m), from (etyl) (m), .Noun
(en noun)- "S'cat! s'cat! — set that cat off that barns knee — it al puzzum it!"
- "Ah've tel'd 'em awal abart that tu monny a hunderd times, bud thuh tak no moar gaum o' muh then a stoop."
- "Good-night, Uncle Nat," he called. Uncle Nat walked on in grim silence, never turning his head, for quite half a dozen paces. Then he came back to the gate to which Adam had also returned. "Tak' no gaum o' my gruntlin', Addy," asked Uncle.
- "Take no gaum ," he said. "I've not heard her. This is between thee and me, Tommy. I'll use but one hand."
Derived terms
* gaumish * (l)Verb
(en verb)- "We said nowt on 't. Ther' no 'casion to stir up trouble. But we all gaumed 'at when he heerd t' sounds o' them 'at com to lowse us he'd crawled off into t' workin's an' brayed his head agean a shou'der o' quartz."
- 'Nobody gaums where we are now,' I said.
- Aye sir, we gaum ye.
References
* 1856 , Robert Ferguson, The Northmen in Cumberland & Westmoreland : GAWM. Attention.Alternative forms
* (l)Verb
(en verb)- Don't be mauming and gauming a Body so.
- No, bubby, couldn't hev the wax. Gaum him all up so 't mammy 'd hafter nigh abaout skin him tu git him clean ag'in;
- Isn't it horrible, mamma! One fly produces fifty-two billions of descendants in 60 days in June and July, and they go and crawl over sick people and wade through pus, and sputa, and foul matter exuding from sores, and gaum themselves with every kind of disease-germ, then they go to everybody's dinner-table and wipe themselves off on the butter
- Butter became in my eyes a gauge of character and gentility, almost of integrity. I watched these ravenous wretches "gaum " their batter-cakes with it, help themselves to more than they really wanted, leaving great golden chunks of it half melted and wholly useless, mixed as it was with gravy
- Simply gaum them all over with thick claybank mud and throw them into the fire. The clay will bake hard.
Derived terms
* (l) * begaumReferences
Etymology 3
.Noun
(-)- "douse your head under the pump and wash some of the gaum off your hands and we'll see what your Aunt Debbie can do for that empty feelin'."
- Said 'Black Bill' Walker, of Walker's Valley, in speaking of the forge: 'I never heerd sech a rackity-rack! Ye'd think the heavens was fallin' down! Them fellers aworkin' thar in the sweat an' gaum reminded me more of the gate to the bad place!'
- They thrust their wedge-shaped faces into the light, then, one by one, tried the air with their delicate paper wings. The air bore them up; they circled lazily over the heads of men, they lit on hands and faces and in the gaum of wounds, they died underfoot.
Etymology 4
.Noun
(-)- When he had let what he deemed was a sufficiency of blood out of the incised vein, he called to Elvira to bring a spoon of "sut" from off the back of the fireplace and a "gaum " of spiderwebs from somewhere or other.
- The Rockwellian palette was what Arkansans would call a "gaum " of sentiment— sentimentality, the cynical would say. His paintings were what these same cynics would probably call "representational,"
- "There aint a gaum of grub to be found nowheres. If rain was syrup, we'd all be gorged, but there aint enough sup to make a housefly floop his snoot."
Etymology 5
Probably a variant of (m) (an Irish English slang term for a foolish person), but possibly related to or influenced by .Noun
(en noun)- I saw standing up out of the grass a murderous length of sharp steel. Some gaum of a farm boy had abandoned this scythe while cutting bundles of sourgrass for cattle-breeding.
- I'm no gaum . I'll work th' delivery in such a wise way that neither of the boyos'll fall into the suspicion they had lost as much as a burnt-out match.
- He's a scrawny gaum of a lad named Tony Regan, the tailor's eldest son.
Etymology 6
Variant of , which see for more.Verb
(en verb)- "She'll get plum bereft 'n worried, even git the all'overs, if n the place's all gaumed up."
- Some gaumed up their whole lives by a-hasteing in this or that thing, taking out their impatience on this or the other body.
Anagrams
* * ----gaumy
English
Alternative forms
* gormyAdjective
(-)- The narrow, dark stairs are gaumy with paste, and everywhere open barrels of the mixture gave out the sickening, sour odor that is always in the nostrils of the workers.
- And Fothergil Finch, rather gaumy
- With Cosmic cosmetics, was there,
- But the Swami went just as the Swami,
- After oiling the kinks in his hair.
- I said to Hermione: "Goddess! You're graceful, you're Greek, you're a rose, "
- Far from being gaumy with pitch, they looked rather remarkably smooth and well manicured.