lyme
See also: Lyme
English
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Verb
lyme (third-person singular simple present lymes, present participle lyming, simple past and past participle lymed)
- (Jamaica, slang) to hang out (to spend time doing nothing in particular)
- 2006, Colin Channer, Iron Balloons: Hit Fiction from Jamaica's Calabash Writer's Workshop, page 19:
- But everyday,[sic] while all of this was going on, there'd be some lyming (hanging out)—and this is how the spirit of the music was absorbed, how apprentices both learned and caught on.
- 2008, Thomas Glave, The Torturer's Wife, page 229:
- […] in Carlton's living room one Saturday evening, spending a few hours lyming over rum and, of all things, codfish dumplings, another thing Carlton loved, even in the evening […]
- 2018 June 17, “Auto Bonding - Fathers Use Automotives To Build Relationships With Their Children”, in Jamaica Gleaner:
- Barnes, who organised the day's activities which involved several fathers and their children lyming at DaCosta Farms and Adventures, was very adamant that it is important for fathers to bond with their kids while they are still young.
See also
Jamaican Creole
Middle English
Etymology 1
From limu, plural of Old English lim, from Proto-West Germanic *limu.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈlim(ə)/, /ˈleːm(ə)/
Noun
lyme (plural lymes)
References
- “lim, n.(1).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-04-09.
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