gormy

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈɡɔːmi/

Etymology 1

Related to the largely synonymous word gorming.

Adjective

gormy (not comparable)

  1. (US and Britain, dialectal, chiefly Northern England and New England) Clumsy, awkward, ungainly, klutzy.
    • 1990, John Gould, There Goes Maine!, →ISBN, page 1187:
      And not always with finesse — the Lombard clanked and churned, and a man who is like a regular Lombard may be a bit gormy and sometimes apply brute strength when he might do the work easier if he'd stop and think a little.
    • 1990, Maurice Shadbolt, Monday's Warriors: A Novel, →ISBN, page 5:
      Kimball was never one to argue with a comrade's eyes and ears, not even those of a gormy jeezer like Connolly.
    • 2009, Stephen King, Under the Dome: A Novel, →ISBN, page 682:
      The Killian boy was carrying a chair, and making difficulties with it; he was what old-time Yankees would have called “a gormy lad.”
    • 2010, Pat Cunningham, A London Werewolf in America, →ISBN, page 32:
      Just the sort of place gormy Eugene would pick to hold a family get-together.
    • For quotations of use of this term, see Citations:gormy.
Synonyms

References

  • John Gould, ‎Lillian Ross, Maine lingo: boiled owls, billdads & wazzats (1975), page 114
  • Sidney Oldall Addy, A Supplement to the Sheffield Glossary, volume 22, issue 2 (1891), page 24

Etymology 2

From gorm/gaum (smear) (see those entries for more).

Adjective

gormy (not comparable)

  1. (US and Britain, dialectal, chiefly Southern US) Alternative form of gaumy (sticky, smeared with something sticky; grimy)
    • 1914, Edward Henry Peple, The prince chap, a comedy in three acts (1992 reprint →ISBN, page 50:
      The first thing you have got to do is to wash them gormy 'ands []
    • 1916, Clarke Abigail, Edward Everett Hale at Harvard College, part IV, in The Unitarian Register, volume 95, page 583:
      "When I bought my tamarinds I eat one or two and then discovered that I had left my handkerchief at home, my hands were a little gormy, so I washed them in Frog Pond."

References

  • Mildred Jordan Brooks, Southern stuff: down-home talk and bodacious lore →ISBN, page 59: gormy, adj. Sticky or smeary. "Who wants to pick up a youngun all gormy with butter and 'lasses?"
  • Bennett Wood Green, Word-book of Virginia Folk-speech (1912), page 202: Gormy, adj. Smeary; sticky.
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