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Humpy vs Hence - What's the difference?

humpy | hence |

As an adjective humpy

is characterised by humps, uneven.

As a noun humpy

is (australia) a hut or temporary shelter made from bark and tree branches, especially for aborigines.

As an adverb hence is

(archaic) from here, from this place, away.

As a verb hence is

(obsolete) to send away.

humpy

English

Etymology 1

Adjective

(er)
  • Characterised by humps, uneven.
  • * 1907 , Edith M.H Baylor, A Little Prospector , page 60,
  • A very weary small boy and a weary father and mother were soon asleep in the hardest and humpiest bed ever made.
  • * 1988 , John Gunnell, Chevrolet Pickups, 1946-1972: How to Identify, Select and Restore Chevrolet Collector Light Trucks, Panels and El Caminos , page 19,
  • The cab height was reduced, but the front fenders looked higher and humpier .
  • * 2011 , Steven Vogel, Comparative Biomechanics: Life's Physical World , page 255,
  • The sand dollars adjust the gaps between individuals depending on flow speed, and populations from more sheltered locations consist of slightly humpier (more cambered) individuals with greater lift coefficients.
  • Muscular; hunky.
  • * 2010 , John Butler, Ships That Pass in the Night , page 90,
  • On a Friday night, Tom went upstairs to the second-floor show bar at the club to see the final show, and decided that Oscar had really underpraised the dancers – as each one entered, he appeared to be even humpier and better-hung than the ones before.
  • Hunched, bent over.
  • * 1907 , P. G. Wodehouse, Herbert Westbrook, Not George Washington: An Autobiographical Novel , 2008, page 107,
  • Tell you what it was just like. Reminded me of it even at the time: that picture of Napoleon coming back from Moscow. The Reverend was Napoleon, and we were the generals; and if there were three humpier men walking the streets of London at that moment I should have liked to have seen them.
  • Sulky; irritable.
  • * 1996 , Mark Kinkead-Weekes, D.H. Lawrence: Triumph to Exile, 1912-1922 , Volume 1, page 55,
  • As the rain poured down; and Frieda went on and on about the children; and Lawrence got humpier' and ' humpier but kept asking ‘a dozen times a day in all keys, are you miserable’ (i. 534); it must have been the Christmas misery all over again.
    Derived terms
    * humpily * humpiness

    Etymology 2

    From (etyl) (Brisbane region) , perhaps influenced by (hump).

    Noun

    (humpies)
  • (Australia) A hut or temporary shelter made from bark and tree branches, especially for Aborigines.
  • * 1984 , Maxwell John Charlesworth (editor), Religion in Aboriginal Australia: An Anthology , page 129,
  • I dreamed that a boy child walked past all the other humpies [Australian white term for native huts] in the camp and kept coming until he got to my house. He beat on the bark wall.
  • *1961 , (Nene Gare), The Fringe Dwellers , Text Classics 2012, p. 31:
  • *:Trilby was the first to wake, her face barred with sunlight that slipped through the inadequate walls of the humpy .
  • * 1988 , Tom Cole, Hell West and Crooked , 1995, Angus & Robertson, p. 257,
  • There weren?t that many blacks about, but a lot of humpies – at times it must have been a fairly big camp.
  • * 2003 , Frank G. Clarke, Australia in a Nutshell: A Narrative History , page 215,
  • Evicted men and their families lived wherever they could, and shanty towns of hessian-sack humpies' grew up in Sydney?s southern suburbs on vacant crown land: the largest being at Brighton-le-Sands, Rockdale, Long Bay and La Perouse. In such camps, unemployed huddled for warmth in ' humpies while, closer to the city, others squatted in caves in the Domain around the local beauty spot known as Mrs Macquarie?s chair.
    Synonyms
    * gunyah

    hence

    English

    Adverb

    (-)
  • (archaic) from here, from this place, away
  • I'm going hence , because you have insulted me.
    Get thee hence , Satan!
  • * c.1599-1601 , , Act 4, Scene 1,
  • O Gertrude, come away! / The sun no sooner shall the mountains touch, / But we will ship him hence :
  • * 1849 , ,
  • Ye men of Galilee! / Why stand ye looking up to heaven, where Him ye ne’er may see, / Neither ascending hence , nor returning hither again?
  • (archaic, figuratively) from the living or from this world
  • ''After a long battle, my poor daughter was taken hence .
  • (archaic, of a length of time) in the future from now
  • ''A year hence it will be forgotten.
  • (conjunctive) as a result; therefore, for this reason
  • ''I shall go to Japan and hence will not be here in time for the party.
    ''The purse is handmade and hence very expensive.
  • * 1910 , , Section VI: Weak Points and Strong, 8,
  • Hence that general is skillful in attack whose opponent does not know what to defend; and he is skillful in defense whose opponent does not know what to attack.
  • * 1910 , [1513], , Chapter VI,
  • Hence it comes that all armed Prophets have been victorious, and all unarmed Prophets have been destroyed.
  • * 1731 May 27, ,
  • That hence arises the peculiar Unhappiness of that Business, which other Callings are no way liable to;
  • (temporal location) from this time, from now
  • ''The plane will leave two months hence .

    Synonyms

    * consequently

    Derived terms

    * henceforth * henceforward

    Verb

    (henc)
  • (obsolete) To send away.
  • (Sir Philip Sidney)
    English conjunctive adverbs English location adverbs English temporal location adverbs