crampsome

Wilson Gray hwgray at GMAIL.COM
Tue Jun 3 19:46:17 UTC 2008


As it happens, _boresome_, is the *only* BE term, used universally,
AFAIK, despite the pressure from sE "boring."

-Wilson

On Tue, Jun 3, 2008 at 1:19 PM, Charles Doyle <cdoyle at uga.edu> wrote:
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> Sender:       American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Poster:       Charles Doyle <cdoyle at UGA.EDU>
> Subject:      crampsome
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>
> I am reading Robert B. Parker's western novel _Appaloosa_ (2005).  Near the beginning the first-person narrator explains his experience in the cavalry: "I liked the space, and how far you could see . . . . But most of the time, I said, it was sort of crampsome" (p. 13).
>
> The word "crampsome" interested me. It is absent from the OED. Google yields a mere 8 hits (two of them quotations from Parker's novel), together with 7 (overlapping) hits in Google Books.
>
> Kipling used the word in his story "New Brooms," first published in 1888 and collected in _Abaft the Funnel_ (1909): ". . . he was aware of a crampsome feeling at the pit of his stomach" (p. 92). Kipling also used the word in a letter dated 26 Jan. 1888, in _Letters_, ed. Thomas Piney, 6 vols. (Macmillan, 1990-2004): ". . .  my hand is getting shaky and crampsome" (1:152). I'm sure the gatherers of entries for the OED combed Kipling.  They probably regarded "crampsome" as just a nonce word (or a ntwice word). They were almost right.
>
> --Charlie
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All say, "How hard it is that we have to die"---a strange complaint to
come from the mouths of people who have had to live.
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 -Sam'l Clemens

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