different between angst vs whump

angst

English

Etymology

Borrowed from German Angst or Danish angst; attested since the 19th century in English translations of the works of Freud and Søren Kierkegaard. Initially capitalized (as in German and contemporaneous Danish), the term first began to be written with a lowercase "a" around 1940–44. The German and Danish terms both derive from Middle High German angest, from Old High German angust, from Proto-Germanic *angustiz; Dutch angst is cognate. Compare Swedish ångest.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: ?ng(k)sts, IPA(key): /æ?(k)st/
    • (General American, Canada) IPA(key): (see /æ/ raising) [e??(k)st]
  • Rhymes: -æ?kst

Noun

angst (uncountable)

  1. Emotional turmoil; painful sadness.
    • 2007, Martyn Bone, Perspectives on Barry Hannah (page 3)
      Harry's adolescence is theatrical and gaudy, and many of its key scenes have a lurid and camp quality that is appropriate to the exaggerated mood-shifting and self-dramatizing of teen angst.
  2. A feeling of acute but vague anxiety or apprehension often accompanied by depression, especially philosophical anxiety.

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

angst (third-person singular simple present angsts, present participle angsting, simple past and past participle angsted)

  1. (informal, intransitive) To suffer angst; to fret.

References

  • angst on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • “angst”, in The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 4th edition, Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin, 2000, ?ISBN
  • "angst" in WordNet 2.0, Princeton University, 2003.

Anagrams

  • 'ganst, Gnats, Stang, Tangs, Tsang, gnast, gnat's, gnats, stang, tangs

Danish

Etymology

From Middle High German angest, from Old High German angust, from Proto-Germanic *angustiz.

Adjective

angst

  1. afraid, anxious, alarmed

Noun

angst c (singular definite angsten, not used in plural form)

  1. fear, alarm, apprehension, dread
  2. anxiety
  3. angst

Dutch

Etymology

From Middle Dutch anxt, from Old Dutch *angust, from Proto-Germanic *angustiz.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??st/
  • Hyphenation: angst
  • Rhymes: -??st

Noun

angst m (plural angsten, diminutive angstje n)

  1. fear, fright, anxiety
    Synonyms: schrik, vrees, vrucht

Derived terms

  • angstaanjagend
  • angsthaas
  • angstig
  • angstpsychose
  • angststoornis
  • bindingsangst
  • faalangst
  • vliegangst

Related terms

  • eng

Descendants

  • Afrikaans: angs

Anagrams

  • stang

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Middle Low German (compare German Angst).

Noun

angst m (definite singular angsten, uncountable)

  1. angst, anxiety

Derived terms

References

“angst” in The Bokmål Dictionary.

angst From the web:

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whump

English

Etymology

Imitative.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?mp

Noun

whump (plural whumps)

  1. (informal) A thumping sound.
  2. (fandom slang) A genre of fan fiction in which a character endures injury, torture, or other forms of physical and mental suffering.
    • 2014, Joseph Brennan, "'Fandom is full of pearl clutching old ladies': Nonnies in the online slash closet", International Journal of Cultural Studies, Volume 17, Number 4 (2014), page 365:
      By embracing dark genres of slash such as ‘squick’ and ‘whump’, the art of mythagowood purposely skirts parameters of taste and acceptability.
    • 2018, Naja Later, "Quality Television (TV) Eats Itself: The TV-Auteur and the Promoted Fanboy", Quarterly Review of Film and Video, Volume 35, Number 6 (2018), page 540:
      Narrative devices shared by Hannibal and fanfiction include “whump,” the vivid abuse and torture of a character, a popular convention across certain types of fanfiction: Graham is knocked out, shot, stabbed, gutted, sawed open, and subjected to induced seizures.
    • 2019, Adrienne E. Raw, "Normalizing Disability: Tagging and Disability Identity Construction through Marvel Cinematic Universe Fanfiction", Canadian Journal of Disability Studies, Volume 8, Number 2, April 2019, pages 202-203:
      However, further research with a larger sample and encompassing more fandoms would be necessary to confirm this potential explanation of this trend and to explore the impact of other factors, such as assigning characters a physical and/or mental disability or illness for the purpose of whump or hurt/comfort stories.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:whump.

Verb

whump (third-person singular simple present whumps, present participle whumping, simple past and past participle whumped)

  1. (informal, transitive) To strike something with a whump.

whump From the web:

  • what whump mean
  • what does whump mean
  • what is whump fic
  • what are whump prompts
  • what does whimper mean
  • what does whump
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