crump
See also: Crump
English
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Onomatopoeic.
Noun
crump (plural crumps)
- The sound of a muffled explosion.
- 1929, Robert Graves, Goodbye to All That
- [hymn] "To an inheritance incorruptible . . . Through faith unto salvation, Ready to be revealed at the last trump." For "trump" we always used to sing "crump." A crump was German five-point-nine shell, and "the last crump" would be the end of the War.
- 1999, Kate Atkinson, Behind the Scenes at the Museum
- Crump, crack! A shell exploded near them and the whole aircraft yawned to port as if somebody had punched it through the sky.
- 2000, Richard Woodman, The Darkening Sea
- Above this grey skyline slowly lifting clouds of dirty smoke rose into the morning air as the salvoes of Japanese shells exploded with a delayed crump.
- 2008, Paul Wood, BBC News. Taking cover on Sderot front line
- "Now you can see what life is like for us here," said Yakov Shoshani, raising his voice to make himself heard over the sound of a loud crump.
- 1929, Robert Graves, Goodbye to All That
Verb
crump (third-person singular simple present crumps, present participle crumping, simple past and past participle crumped)
- (intransitive) To produce such a sound.
- 2007 September 28, William Grimes, “In Middle Leg of the Race, the Prize Was Italy”, in New York Times:
- “Mortars crumped, and from the high ground to the east and south came the shriek of 88-millimeter shells, green fireballs that whizzed through the dunes at half a mile a second, trailing golden plumes of dust.”
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Etymology 2
See crumb.
Adjective
Etymology 3
From Middle English crump, cromp, croume, from Old English crump, crumb (“stooping, bent, crooked”), from Proto-Germanic *krumbaz, *krumpaz (“bent”). Compare Dutch krom (“bent”), German krumm (“crooked”), Danish krum. Related to cramp.
Adjective
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