different between samp vs pamp

samp

English

Etymology

From Massachusett nasamp, nasaump (softened with water); compare suppawn.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /samp/

Noun

samp (countable and uncountable, plural samps)

  1. (chiefly US) An article of food consisting of coarse ground maize, or a porridge made from it.
    • 1675, The Captivity of Mary Rowlandson, included in The Portable North American Indian Reader, New York: Penguin Books, 1977, page 341,
      I asked him to give me a little of his Broth, or Water they [Horses feet] were boiling in; he took a dish, and gave me one spoonful of Samp, and bid me take as much of the Broth as I would.
    • 1882, The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 50, page 549,
      The meal, coarse or fine, is then used for samps, mushes, or batters, and cakes, thick or thin, and of many varieties and degrees of wholesomeness.
    • 1975, Sheila Roberts, Outside Life's Feast: Short Stories, page 18,
      'You kids have everything but you don't appreciate it. Mom must cook you beans and samps. Do you hear? Just beans and samps. That's all. Beans and samps.'
    • 1994, Nelson Mandela, Long Walk to Freedom, Abacus 2010, page 44,
      We remained in class until 12.45, and then had a lunch of samp, sour milk and beans, seldom meat.
    • 2004, Louise Cabral, A Pageant of Shadows, page 327,
      Abigail taught her the use of the samp mortar. Samp was corn broken into coarse grains and boiled as porridge.
    • 2005, Fran Osseo-Asare, Food Culture in Sub-Saharan Africa, page 74,
      In the area of cuisine, the Xhosa have contributed many corn recipes, most famously samp and beans (umngqusho).

Anagrams

  • AMPS, APMs, MAPs, MPAs, SPAM, Spam, amps, maps, pams, spam

Quiripi

Noun

samp

  1. (Unquachog) hominy

References

  • 1791, Thomas Jefferson, A vocabulary of the Language of the Unquachog Indians

Wolof

Verb

  1. to erect

References

Omar Ka (2018) Nanu Dégg Wolof, National African Language Resource Center, ?ISBN, page 18

samp From the web:

  • what sample
  • what sample size is needed
  • what sample rate should i record at
  • what sample rate should i use
  • what sample rate should i export at
  • what sampling method is a survey
  • what sample of matter is a mixture
  • what sample is seeing green


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)

  1. (transitive, archaic) To pamper.

Anagrams

  • MAPP

pamp From the web:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like