| 释义 |
galumph /ɡəˈlʌmf /verb [no object, with adverbial of direction] informalMove in a clumsy, ponderous, or noisy manner: she galumphed along beside him (as adjective galumphing) a galumphing giant...- He galumphs on as though his brain and limbs are still sounding each other out.
- He sees no reason to stop now I had spent the previous night galumphing gracelessly up and down the village hall of Strathmiglo, in the heart of the Howe of Fife.
- Off she flapped, her flimsy cotton based trainers galumphing all the way.
Origin 1871 (in the sense 'prance in triumph'): coined by Lewis Carroll in Through the Looking Glass; perhaps a blend of gallop and triumph. Rhymes bumf, harrumph, humph |