Gim vs Gimp - What's the difference?
gim | gimp |
A narrow ornamental fabric or braid of silk, wool, or cotton, often stiffened with metallic wire or coarse cord running through it, used as trimming for dresses, curtains, furniture, etc. Also (guimpe).
Any coarse or reinforced thread, such as a glazed thread employed in lacemaking to outline designs, or silk thread used as a fishing leader, protected from the bite of fish by a wrapping of fine wire.
* 1936 , Djuna Barnes, Nightwood , Faber & Faber 2007, p. 87:
The plastic cord used in the plaiting and knotting craft (lanyard making); or, the process itself.
(dated, chiefly North Eastern US) Gumption; spirit; ambition; vigor; pep.
* 1898 , Charles Frederick Wingate, What Shall Our Boys Do for a Living? ,
* 1915 , Frederick Frye Rockwell, The Key to the Land: What a City Man Did with a Small Farm ,
* 1924 , , The Midlander ,
(of yarn, cord, thread, etc.) To wrap or wind (surround) with another length of yarn or wire in a tight spiral, often by means of a gimping machine'', creating ''
* 1856 , Campbell Morfit, A Treatise on Chemistry Applied to the Manufacture of Soap and Candles ,
* 1982 , Robert Donington, Music and Its Instruments ,
(dated) To notch or indent; to jag or make jagged; to edge with serrations or grooves.
* 1890 , Sarah Tyson Heston Rorer, How to Cook Vegetables ,
* 1906 , Thomas Ernest Herbert, Telegraphy: A Detailed Exposition of the Telegraph System of the British ,
* 1906 , George Dudley Aspinall Parr, Electrical Engineering: In Theory and Practice ,
* 1978 , John Geraint Jenkins, Traditional Country Craftsmen ,
(informal) A person who is lame due to a crippling of the legs or feet.
(informal) A crippled leg.
(informal) A limp or a limping gait.
* 1934 , , Madame La Gimp [http://books.google.com/books?q=%22gimp+in+one+leg%22]
* 1934 , , What, No Butler? [http://books.google.com/books?id=h7OsO8GyjaAC&pg=PA35&dq=gimp&sig=edaefBbh1yxFkgXDQK7GkigyDQw]
(slang, derogatory)
(BDSM) A sexual submissive, almost always male, dressed generally in a black leather suit. See in Wikipedia.
(dated, Scotland and N England) Neat; trim; delicate; slender; handsome; spruce; elegant.
As adjectives the difference between gim and gimp
is that gim is neat; spruce while gimp is neat; trim; delicate; slender; handsome; spruce; elegant.As a noun gimp is
a narrow ornamental fabric or braid of silk, wool, or cotton, often stiffened with metallic wire or coarse cord running through it, used as trimming for dresses, curtains, furniture, etc. Also {{term|guimpe}}.As a verb gimp is
(of yarn, cord, thread, etc.) To wrap or wind (surround) with another length of yarn or wire in a tight spiral, often by means of a gimping machine, creating ', etc. Also, generally, to wrap or twist with string or wire. See gimped'''.gimp
English
Etymology 1
Attested since about 1660, perhaps from (etyl) gimp'' or (etyl) guimpe, and likely from (etyl) ''guimpre'', a variant of ''(guipure) , a kind of trimming. The regional sense of "gumption" is attested since about 1905, and may have developed due to the reinforced nature of gimp cord, or possibly the influence of the words (gumption) and (gumph).Noun
(en noun)- I'm a fisher of men and my gimp is doing a saltarello over every body of water to fetch up what it may.
page 255
- Love them and encourage them, but put some 'gimp' into them.
page 72
- You haven't got gimp enough to, any more than you could smash the rest of that pint, instead of swallowing it. You're a weakling...
page 219
- When people put a lot on what their folks used to do, it always means they haven't got gimp enough left to do anything themselves.
Verb
(en verb)gimped yarn'', etc. Also, generally, to wrap or twist with string or wire. ''See gimped .
page 435 with illustration
- It consists of seventy fine spun cotton threads, gimped or tied around with thread by a machine similar to that for wrapping bonnet wire.
page 69
- ...low strings later than the mid-seventeenth century are commonly gimped (wound with fine wire on a moderate core) to allow sufficient tension without excessive mass or stiffness.
page 25
- They are prettier cut and gimped in the shape of wheels.
page 438
- This active material consists of a tape of pure lead, which is gimped whilst cold with deep grooves and ridges...
page 421
- Each hole is filled by a rosette of pure lead made by rolling up lead strip or tape which has been gimped or corrugated.
page 232
- In some cases the leather has to be decorated with perforations while its edges may be serrated or gimped .
Etymology 2
Attested in US slang since the 1920s. Maybe influenced by, or cognate with (limp).Noun
(en noun)- She walks with a gimp in one leg, which is why she is called Madame La Gimp...
- ...Flat-wheel Walter...who is called by this name because he walks with a gimp on one side...
Synonyms
* (person who is lame) cripple, disabled (person) * dweeb, nerd, geek, gump, spod, dorkEtymology 3
Scots. Alternate form of (jimp). Compare (etyl) .Adjective
(en adjective)Quotations
* (English Citations of "gimp")References
* 1846 , John T. Brockett, A Glossary of North Country Words ,page 190