different between jewelry vs wampum

jewelry

English

Noun

jewelry (usually uncountable, plural jewelries)

  1. US standard spelling of jewellery.

Verb

jewelry (third-person singular simple present jewelries, present participle jewelrying, simple past and past participle jewelried)

  1. To make jewelry.

Usage notes

Also used in Canada, but less common there than jewellery.

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wampum

English

Etymology

Clipped from wampumpeag (from Narragansett [Term?]; compare the opposite clipping peag), which is a compound of wamp, wompi (white) + umpe (string) + -ag (plural suffix), and referred to the string of white shell-beads rather than the individual beads.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?w?mp?m/

Noun

wampum (countable and uncountable, plural wampums or wampum)

  1. Small beads made from polished shells, especially white ones, formerly used as money and jewelry by certain Native American peoples.
  2. A string of such beads.
  3. (slang) Money.

Synonyms

  • (small beads): seawan, peag; porcelain (such objects or strings of them)

Antonyms

  • (white shells): suckanhock (black shells)

Derived terms

  • wampum belt
  • Wampumgate

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