ChatterBank1 min ago
shrammed
7 Answers
Is anyone else familiar with this word?
What do others think this word means?
If you know the word where do you think it originated? ie Wiltshire, Hampshire...
What do others think this word means?
If you know the word where do you think it originated? ie Wiltshire, Hampshire...
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by scribbler. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.'Shrammed', although old, seems to be a more recent variant on 'shrimped', meaning shrivelled or huddled up with cold. The earliest recorded use of 'shrimped' dates back to the 1630s and it was written by the son of a clergyman in Suffolk...so not really very West Country!
'Shrammed's' earliest appearance - in Francis Grose's Provincial Glossary - was a century and a half later, so all we can say for sure from the title is that it was a dialect word but not necessarily where it originated.
Of course, by the time that 'shrammed' version appeared, it may very well have been in Wiltshire/Hampshire.
As a matter of interest, here is a quote from an edition of The Daily Telegraph published in the 1860s "...being shrammed with cold, as they say in Wiltshire." So, after a couple of centuries, it would appear that it had become West Countryish even if it did not really originate there!
'Shrammed's' earliest appearance - in Francis Grose's Provincial Glossary - was a century and a half later, so all we can say for sure from the title is that it was a dialect word but not necessarily where it originated.
Of course, by the time that 'shrammed' version appeared, it may very well have been in Wiltshire/Hampshire.
As a matter of interest, here is a quote from an edition of The Daily Telegraph published in the 1860s "...being shrammed with cold, as they say in Wiltshire." So, after a couple of centuries, it would appear that it had become West Countryish even if it did not really originate there!
'Shrammed wwith the cold' is a phrase I grew up with in Ireland (Co Tipperary) and it was still fairly common in the 'fifties. I'd love to know where the word originated and when. Although many obscure words here have their origin in the Irish language, others are archaic English. 'Anent' iss another, meaning 'beside' or 'adjacent.' Marjorie Quarton.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.