humpy
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈhʌmpi/
Audio (AU) (file) - Rhymes: -ʌmpi
Adjective
humpy (comparative humpier, superlative humpiest)
- Characterised by humps, uneven.
- Muscular; hunky.
- 2010, John Butler, Ships That Pass in the Night, page 90:
- On a Friday night, Tom went upstairs to the second-floor show bar at the club to see the final show, and decided that Oscar had really underpraised the dancers – as each one entered, he appeared to be even humpier and better-hung than the ones before.
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- Hunched, bent over.
- 1907, P. G. Wodehouse, Herbert Westbrook, Not George Washington: An Autobiographical Novel, 2008, page 107,
- Tell you what it was just like. Reminded me of it even at the time: that picture of Napoleon coming back from Moscow. The Reverend was Napoleon, and we were the generals; and if there were three humpier men walking the streets of London at that moment I should have liked to have seen them.
- 1907, P. G. Wodehouse, Herbert Westbrook, Not George Washington: An Autobiographical Novel, 2008, page 107,
- Sulky; irritable.
- 1996, Mark Kinkead-Weekes, D.H. Lawrence: Triumph to Exile, 1912-1922, volume 1, page 55:
- As the rain poured down; and Frieda went on and on about the children; and Lawrence got humpier and humpier but kept asking ‘a dozen times a day in all keys, are you miserable’ (i. 534); it must have been the Christmas misery all over again.
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Noun
humpy (plural humpies)
- Alternative form of humpie
- 1992, Dana Stabenow, A Cold Day for Murder, →ISBN, page 41:
- It was the river up which the chinook and sockeye and silver and humpy and dog salmon migrated to lay their eggs and dies or to be tangled in set nets and air-freighted to Anchorage, there to be cleaned and frozen and shipped to restaurants and supermarkets half a world away.
- 1996, Elizabeth Wong, Kimchee and Chitlins: A Serious Comedy about Getting Along, →ISBN, page 67:
- Suzie was so funny, she kept talking about fly-fishing. Mark was so confused. He didn't know a yellow humpy from a black wooly worm.
- 2002, Spike Walker, Coming Back Alive, →ISBN:
- In 1997, for example, 150 million pink (humpy) salmon returned to the streams in southeast Alaska alone.
- 2012, C. Pierce, Education in the Age of Biocapitalism, →ISBN:
- The six species of Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus) are Chinook (king), Coho (silver), Sockeye (red), Chum (dog), Pink (humpback or humpy), and Cherry.
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Noun
humpy (plural humpies)
- (Australia) A hut or temporary shelter made from bark and tree branches, especially for Aborigines.
- 1938, Xavier Herbert, Capricornia, Chapter III, p. 29,
- They did nothing much more in the way of building than to erect a number of crazy humpies of such materials as bark and kerosene-cans […]
- 1961, Nene Gare, The Fringe Dwellers, Text Classics 2012, p. 31:
- Trilby was the first to wake, her face barred with sunlight that slipped through the inadequate walls of the humpy.
- 1988, Tom Cole, Hell West and Crooked, 1995, Angus & Robertson, p. 257,
- There weren′t that many blacks about, but a lot of humpies – at times it must have been a fairly big camp.
- 2003, Frank G. Clarke, Australia in a Nutshell: A Narrative History, page 215:
- Evicted men and their families lived wherever they could, and shanty towns of hessian-sack humpies grew up in Sydney′s southern suburbs on vacant crown land: the largest being at Brighton-le-Sands, Rockdale, Long Bay and La Perouse. In such camps, unemployed huddled for warmth in humpies while, closer to the city, others squatted in caves in the Domain around the local beauty spot known as Mrs Macquarie′s chair.
- 1938, Xavier Herbert, Capricornia, Chapter III, p. 29,
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