different between vamp vs villian

vamp

English

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /væmp/
  • Rhymes: -æmp

Etymology 1

From Middle English vaumpe, vaum-pei, vampe (covering for the foot, perhaps a slipper or understocking; upper of a boot or shoe), or from Anglo-Norman vampe, *vaumpé (part of a stocking covering the top of the foot), from Old French avantpied, avantpiet, variants of avantpié, from avant (in front) + pié (foot).

Noun senses 2 and 3 (“a patch; something patched up or improvised”) appear to have been extended from sense 1 (“top part of a boot or shoe”). Sense 4 (“repeated and often improvised musical accompaniment”) was probably derived from sense 3, and sense 5 (“activity to fill or stall for time”) from sense 4.

The verb senses were derived from the noun. Compare also Middle English vaum-peien ((uncertain) to repair (footwear) with a new upper or vamp; to fabricate an upper or vamp).

Noun

vamp (plural vamps)

  1. The top part of a boot or shoe, above the sole and welt and in front of the ankle seam, that covers the instep and toes; the front part of an upper; the analogous part of a stocking. [from c. 1225]
  2. Something added to give an old thing a new appearance.
    Synonym: patch
  3. Something patched up, pieced together, improvised, or refurbished.
  4. (music) A repeated and often improvised accompaniment, usually consisting of one or two measures, often a single chord or simple chord progression, repeated as necessary, for example, to accommodate dialogue or to anticipate the entrance of a soloist. [from c. 1789]
  5. (by extension) An activity or speech intended to fill or stall for time.

Translations

Verb

vamp (third-person singular simple present vamps, present participle vamping, simple past and past participle vamped)

  1. (transitive) To patch, repair, or refurbish.
  2. (transitive) Often as vamp up: to fabricate or put together (something) from existing material, or by adding new material to something existing.
    • 1711, Jonathan Swift, An Excellent New Song
      He has vamp'd an old speech, and the court to their sorrow, / Shall hear him harangue against Prior to morrow.
  3. (transitive) To cobble together, to extemporize, to improvise.
    1. (transitive, intransitive, music, specifically) To perform a vamp (a repeated, often improvised accompaniment, for example, under dialogue or while waiting for a soloist to be ready).
  4. (transitive, shoemaking) To attach a vamp (to footwear).
  5. (transitive, intransitive, now dialectal) To travel by foot; to walk.
  6. (intransitive) To delay or stall for time, as for an audience.
Derived terms
  • new-vamp, revamp
  • vamp up
  • vamper

Etymology 2

Clipping of vampire. From a character type developed first for silent film, notably for Theda Bara's role in the 1915 film A Fool There Was.

The verb is derived from the noun.

Noun

vamp (plural vamps)

  1. A flirtatious, seductive woman, especially one who exploits men by using their sexual desire for her. [from c. 1915]
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:vamp
  2. (informal) A vampire.
Derived terms
  • vampish
Translations

Verb

vamp (third-person singular simple present vamps, present participle vamping, simple past and past participle vamped)

  1. (transitive) To seduce or exploit someone.
Translations

Etymology 3

Origin uncertain; possibly related to vamp (etymology 1, above): see the 2008 quotation.

Noun

vamp (plural vamps)

  1. (US, slang) A volunteer firefighter.
Translations

References

Further reading

  • vamp (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Italian

Etymology

Borrowed from English vamp.

Noun

vamp f (invariable)

  1. vamp (flirtatious woman)

Spanish

Noun

vamp m or f (plural vamps)

  1. vamp

vamp From the web:

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villian

English

Etymology 1

Noun

villian

  1. Misspelling of villain.

Etymology 2

Noun

villian (plural villians)

  1. Synonym of vaudevillian

Anagrams

  • Villani, villain

villian From the web:

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