different between hump vs gump

hump

English

Etymology

Probably borrowed from Dutch homp (hump, lump) or Middle Low German hump (heap, hill, stump), from Old Saxon *hump (hill, heap, thick piece), from Proto-Germanic *humpaz (hip, height), from Proto-Indo-European *kumb- (curved).

Pronunciation

  • (Canada, UK) IPA(key): /h?mp/
  • Rhymes: -?mp

Noun

hump (plural humps)

  1. A mound of earth.
  2. A speed hump.
  3. A deformity in humans caused by abnormal curvature of the upper spine.
  4. (animals) A rounded fleshy mass, such as on a camel or zebu.
  5. (slang) An act of sexual intercourse.
  6. (Britain, slang, with definite article) A bad mood.
    She's got the hump with me.
    Go away! You're giving me the right hump.
  7. (slang) A painfully boorish person.
    That guy is such a hump!
  8. A wave that forms in front of an operating hovercraft and impedes progress at low speeds.

Synonyms

  • (abnormal deformity of the spine): gibbous, humpback, hunch, hunchback

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

hump (third-person singular simple present humps, present participle humping, simple past and past participle humped)

  1. (transitive) To bend something into a hump.
  2. (transitive, intransitive) To carry (something), especially with some exertion.
  3. to rhythmically thrust the pelvis in a manner conducive to sexual intercourse
    1. (transitive, intransitive) To dry-hump.
    2. (transitive, intransitive) To have sex (with).
  4. (US, slang, dated) To prepare for a great exertion; to put forth effort.
  5. (slang, dated) To vex or annoy.
  6. (rail transport) To shunt wagons / freight cars over the hump in a hump yard.

Synonyms

  • (to carry): heft, shoulder, tote; see also Thesaurus:carry
  • (to go on foot): hike, trek, walk; see also Thesaurus:walk
  • (to have sex): bang, bone, ride, shag; see also Thesaurus:copulate or Thesaurus:copulate with
  • (to vex): bother, irk, rile; see also Thesaurus:annoy

Derived terms

  • dry-hump
  • hump it

Translations

Anagrams

  • phum, umph

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

Possibly related to Low German humpel, compare with English hump.

Noun

hump m (definite singular humpen, indefinite plural humper, definite plural humpene)

  1. a bump or hump (e.g. in a road)

Derived terms

  • fartshump

References

  • “hump” in The Bokmål Dictionary.

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

Possibly related to Low German humpel, compare with English hump.

Noun

hump m (definite singular humpen, indefinite plural humpar, definite plural humpane)

  1. a bump or hump (e.g. in a road)

Derived terms

  • fartshump

References

  • “hump” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.

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gump

English

Noun

gump (plural gumps)

  1. (US, dated) A foolish person.
    Synonyms: dunce, fool, nitwit
    • 1829, David Walker, Walker’s Appeal, Boston: for the author, p. 33,[1]
      [] the young ignorant gump hearing his father or mother who perhaps may be ten times more ignorant, in point of literature than himself, extoling his learning, struts about in the full assurance, that his attainments in literature are sufficient to take him through the world, when in fact, he has scarcely any learning at all!!
    • 1839, Charles Edwards Lester, Chains and Freedom: or, The Life and Adventures of Peter Wheeler, a Colored Man Yet Living, New York: E. S. Arnold, Book 2, Chapter 3, pp. 225-226,[2]
      [] I’d no idee of going to be shot at for money, like these ’ere fools and gumps that goes down to the Florida swamps, to be shot at all day by Ingens, for eighteen pence a day.
    • 1893, Frederic Scrimshaw, The Dogs and the Fleas, Chicago: Douglas McCallum, Chapter 36, p. 222,[3]
      Low, coarse, undiscerning simpletons, they are all animal sensibility, and have not yet developed the ability to pick truth from error, reality from show, and fraud out of its fine garments of honesty; gumps and boobies, they are pleased with a rattle and tickled with a straw.
    • 1913, Edna Ferber, Roast Beef, Medium, New York: Frederick A. Stokes, Chapter 1, p. 18,[4]
      Every fond mama is gump enough to think that every Greek god she sees looks like her own boy, even if her own happens to squint and have two teeth missing?which mine hasn’t, thanks the Lord!
    • 1925, T. C. Bridges, The River Riders: An Exciting Lumberjack Story, London and New York: Frederick Warne, Chapter 31,[5]
      “I’m a gump, Keith,” he exclaimed. “Someone ought to kick me. I never was so plumb mistook in all of my born days.”

References

  • gump at OneLook Dictionary Search

Swedish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??mp/
  • Rhymes: -??mp

Noun

gump c

  1. rump

Declension

gump From the web:

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