crimp

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kɹɪmp/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɪmp

Etymology 1

From Middle English crimpen (to be contracted, be drawn together), from Middle Dutch crimpen, crempen (to crimp), from Proto-Germanic *krimpaną (to shrink, draw back) (compare related Old English ġecrympan (to curl)).[1] Cognate with Dutch krimpen, German Low German krimpen[2], Faroese kreppa (crisis), and Icelandic kreppa (to bend tightly, clench). Compare also derivative Middle English crymplen (to wrinkle) and causative crempen (to turn something back, restrain, literally to cause to shrink or draw back), both ultimately derived from the same root. See also cramp.

Adjective

crimp

  1. (obsolete) Easily crumbled; friable; brittle.
    • 1708, John Philips, Cyder. A Poem, page 27:
      Now the Fowler [] Treads the crimp Earth,
  2. (obsolete) Weak; inconsistent; contradictory.
    • 1750, John Arbuthnot, The History of John Bull:
      The evidence is crimp; the witnesses swear backward and forward, and contradict themselves

Noun

crimp (plural crimps)

  1. A fastener or a fastening method that secures parts by bending metal around a joint and squeezing it together, often with a tool that adds indentations to capture the parts.
    The strap was held together by a simple metal crimp.
  2. The natural curliness of wool fibres.
  3. (usually in the plural) Hair that is shaped so it bends back and forth in many short kinks.
  4. (obsolete) A card game.
    1640, Ben Jonson, The Magnetick Lady, or, Hvmors Reconcil'd, Act 2, scene 4:
    Lady Loadstone: Laugh, and keep company, at gleek or crimp. / Mistress Polish: Your ladyship says right, crimp sure will cure her.
Translations

Verb

crimp (third-person singular simple present crimps, present participle crimping, simple past and past participle crimped)

  1. To press into small ridges or folds, to pleat, to corrugate.
  2. To fasten by bending metal so that it squeezes around the parts to be fastened.
    He crimped the wire in place.
  3. To pinch and hold; to seize.
  4. To style hair into a crimp, to form hair into tight curls, to make it kinky.
  5. To join the edges of food products.
    Cornish pasties are crimped during preparation.
  6. To bend or mold leather into shape.
  7. To gash the flesh, e.g. of a raw fish, to make it crisper when cooked.
Translations

Etymology 2

Uncertain. Likely from etymology 1, above, but the historical development is not clear. Attested since the seventeenth century.[3]

Noun

crimp (plural crimps)

  1. An agent who procures seamen, soldiers, etc., especially by seducing, decoying, entrapping, or impressing them.
    • 1758, John Blake, A Plan, for regulating the Marine System of Great Britain, page 44:
      Indeed, when a maſter of a ſhip, ſuppoſe at Jamaica, hath loſt any of his hands, he applies of courſe to a crimp [] who makes it his buſineſs to ſeduce the men belonging to ſome other ſhip,
    • 1806, John Gabriel Stedman, Narrative of a five years' expedition against the revolted Negroes of Surinam, page 28:
      [] and who had been trepanned into the West India Company's service by the crimps or silver-coopers as a common soldier.
    • 1836, Frederick Marryat, Mr Midshipman Easy, page 350:
      Jack and Metsy at Portsmouth, fitting out the vessel, and offering three guineas ahead to the crimps for every good able seaman
    • 1842, Frederick Marryat, Percival Keene, page 215:
      I hear there are plenty of good men stowed away by the crimps at different places.
    • 1840, Washington Irving, “The Count Van Horn”, in The Knickerbocker, page 243:
      As Count Antoine was in the habit of sallying forth at night [] he came near being carried off by a gang of crimps
    • 1887 May 21, “Mr Besant's romance of the sea”, in The Spectator, volume 60, page 691:
      The World Went Very Well Then—in the high and palmy days of the crimp, the pirate, the press-gang, and the smuggler—is a case in point.
  2. (specifically, law) One who infringes sub-section 1 of the Merchant Shipping Act of 1854, applied to a person other than the owner, master, etc., who engages seamen without a license from the Board of Trade.
  3. (obsolete) A keeper of a low lodging house where sailors and emigrants are entrapped and fleeced.

Verb

crimp (third-person singular simple present crimps, present participle crimping, simple past and past participle crimped)

  1. (transitive) To impress (seamen or soldiers); to entrap, to decoy.
    • 1831 March, Thomas Carlyle, “Historic Survey of German Poetry By W. Taylor”, in The Edinburgh Review, volume 53, page 168:
      [] nay, where in any corner he can spy a tall man, clutching at him, to crimp him or impress him.
    • 1833 April, Thomas Carlyle, “Mémoires, Correspondance, et Ouvrage inédit de Diderot”, in The Foreign Quarterly Review, page 269:
      To the Reverend Fathers, it seemed that Denis would make an excellent Jesuit; wherefore they set about coaxing and courting, with intent to crimp him.
    • 1837, Arthur Wellesley, John Gurwood, editor, The Dispatches of Field Marshal the Duke of Wellington during his Various Campaigns, volume 9, page 235-6:
      It appears that that officer, instead of attending to interesting events likely to occur in this quarter, is desirous of plundering corn and crimping recruits
    • 1839 February 11, The Standard, London, page 4:
      —why not create customers in the Queen's dominions for our own manufacturing produce, instead of trying at enormous expense to crimp them in other countries?
    • 1867, Goldwin Smith, Three English Statesmen, page 235:
      Voltaire is never so good as when he is ridiculing the cruel folly which crimps a number of ignorant and innocent peasants, dresses them up in uniform, teaches them to march and wheel, and sends them off to kill and be killed
    • 1884 February 1, Henry Labouchere, “Scuttling out of Egypt”, in The Pall Mall Budget, page 7:
      On this the Egyptian Government crimped negroes in the streets of Cairo, appointed the most notorious ex-slave-dealer in the Soudan to command them, converted policemen into soldiers, and announced that these negroes and policemen were to be sent to the Soudan

References

  1. Sergei Nikolayev (2003), “Germanic etymology”, in StarLing database server
  2. Eric Partridge (1966), Origins: An Etymological Dictionary of Modern English, p. 130.
  3. crimp, n.2.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, November 2010.
  • crimp in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • crimp” in Douglas Harper, Online Etymology Dictionary, 2001–2019.
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