famble
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈfæmbəl/
Audio (AU) (file) - Rhymes: -æmbəl
Etymology 1
Possibly related to fumble.
Noun
famble (plural fambles)
- (obsolete, slang) A hand.
- c. 1622, John Fletcher, Philip Massinger [et al.?], “Beggars Bvsh”, in Comedies and Tragedies […], London: […] Humphrey Robinson, […], and for Humphrey Moseley […], published 1647, →OCLC, Act II, scene i:
- We clap our fambles.
- 1951, Georgette Heyer, The Quiet Gentleman:
- A Bow Street Runner says "I knew a cove as talked the way you do – leastways, in the way of business I knew him! In fact, you remind me of him very strong […] He was on the dub-lay, and very clever with his fambles. He ended up in the Whit, o’ course."
- 1999, Nancy Kress, Yanked!, page 47:
- I'm keeping my fambles clean on this trip.
Etymology 2
From Middle English falmelen.
Verb
famble (third-person singular simple present fambles, present participle fambling, simple past and past participle fambled)
- (obsolete) To stammer.
- 1833, Horace Smith, Gale Middleton: A Story of the Present Day - Volume 1, page 149:
- “Stow that, Jem, if you please, ” said Gemman Joe, as he had been called by his comrade.— "Toggery is too apt to tell tales. I won't have a rag of it fambled. It's a prime job for us already, for we are to touch. five-and-twenty guineas a-piece, you know, for doing his business, and we don't get such a grab as that every day."
- 1981, Alexander Theroux, Darconville's Cat, page 310:
- Destiny, it might be said, simply opened its mouth to speak and, for reasons no one really knew, fambled to a halt.
- 2017, Mark Sampson, The Slip:
- “You know, I realized,” she began, her eyes sparkling in the pub's dimness, “that I didn't even catch your name at the Oxford Union the other night.” “Um, Sharpe,” I fambled. “Philip.”
See also
- fimble-famble (probably etymologically related to one of the above)
Krio
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