vamper

English

Etymology 1

vamp + -er

Noun

vamper (plural vampers)

  1. One who vamps; one who creates or repairs by piecing old things together; a cobbler.
    • 1833, Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (Great Britain), The Gallery of Portraits: With Memoirs, Charles Knight, London, page 98:
      Cibber, a vamper of other men’s plays, has borrowed from it his favourite Nonjuror, and applied it to the purposes of a political party.

Etymology 2

Compare vaunt.

Verb

vamper (third-person singular simple present vampers, present participle vampering, simple past and past participle vampered)

  1. (Britain, Scotland, dialectal) To swagger; to make an ostentatious show.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Jamieson to this entry?)

Anagrams


French

Verb

vamper

  1. to vamp (seduce)

Conjugation

Further reading

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