different between pamp vs wamp
pamp
English
Etymology
From Middle English pampen, from Middle Low German pampen (“to pamper oneself, live luxuriously”), from Old Saxon *pamp?n, from Proto-Germanic *pamp?n? (“to swell”), from Proto-Indo-European *bamb- (“round object”). Cognate with West Frisian pampelje, Dutch pampelen, pamperen (“to cram, pamper”), German pampfen, bamben, Norwegian pampa (“to stuff oneself”).
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -æmp
Verb
pamp (third-person singular simple present pamps, present participle pamping, simple past and past participle pamped)
- (transitive, archaic) To pamper.
Anagrams
- MAPP
pamp From the web:
wamp
English
Etymology
Probably from Massachusett wompi (“white”).
Noun
wamp (plural wamps)
- The common American eider.
References
- wamp in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
wamp From the web:
- what wampanoag village was plymouth built on
- what wamp server
- what's wampum mean
- what wamp means
- what wampus mean
- what wampanoag mean
- what wampa mean
- wampum belt meaning
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share