i Register
In some senses, rump is marked as slang, vulgar, UK, British, historical. Watch for register when choosing this word.
ADJ.
illegal, own
VERB + RUMP
kicking
RUMP + NOUN
c
PREP.
from
noun
The hindquarters of a four-legged mammal, not including its legs
A cut of meat from the rump of an animal.
The buttocks.
A remnant, as in Rump Parliament.
This is the rump of the C.L.C. branch to Southport Lord Street, which lost its passenger services beyond Aintree from January 7, 1952, whereupon the timetable between Gateacre and Aintree was greatly curtailed.
verb
To turn one's back on, to show one's (clothed) backside to, as a sign of disrespect.
And when they succeeded in forcing themselves back upon the King, who loathed them, and had rumped them, they put the Great Seal into Commission, and omitted Lord Brougham's name in the list of the Cabinet.
Soon afterwards, meeting the lecturer, whom he had been previously in the habit of greeting with great courtesy, the Duke looked him fairly down, and then rumped him without mercy.
To fuck. (Compare bum (verb).)
Rodrigo had also set eyes on a woman at court but I doubt he was rumping her in the hay, like I was with Maria. In Rodrigo's case, it was more a sort of teenager fascination of the unobtainable.
In fact I have to stop thinking about it. Because that would mean all those times I was rumping her she was only pretending. Not just faking orgasms like they can, but pretending through and through and that's a thought can make me a bit dizzy.
To cheat.
Seems this Stevie had a score to settle with some guy that had rumped him over a bundle of traveller's cheques and he thought by telling me this guy was the one that shot me I'd find him and kill him stone dead; […]
They'd been rumped out of half a kilo of charlie by a toeraf of a crack-head called Mad Mickey D from Bermondsey. And after he rumped them he was going round telling everybody that the Arifs were total fucking mugs. So they called him out for a drink one night, palled him up and then proceeded to get him paralytic.
To ramble; to move (or talk) aimlessly.
[…] Mr. Turner. Mr. Speaker, the gentleman from Allegheny has been rumping around for several minutes and I think I ought to have a chance to rump a little bit.
SEIGISMUNDO If she hadn't gone rumping around the world. Rubbing up on this and that man for her sport. PRIVIE She only rubbed on one man. SEIGISMUNDO That was one too many.
To move (someone or something) around.
Barney rumped him out to the step, but the kid hung onto the door. Wind roared into the cab. Cold. Slicing up Barney's trouser's legs, pressing his shirt. The rig's heavy treads machinegunned the pavement.
So he held Jody and she drank half and then he rumped her up on his shoulder and patted her, the way his mom did.
name
A surname.
The Rump Parliament of 1648-1653 and 1659-1660.
Before executing Charles I, the Rump made it illegal to proclaim anyone else king to replace him.
This is the rump of the C.L.C. branch to Southport Lord Street, which lost its passenger services beyond Aintree from January 7, 1952, whereupon the timetable between Gateacre and Aintree was greatly
WiktionaryAnd when they succeeded in forcing themselves back upon the King, who loathed them, and had rumped them, they put the Great Seal into Commission, and omitted Lord Brougham's name in the list of the Ca
WiktionarySoon afterwards, meeting the lecturer, whom he had been previously in the habit of greeting with great courtesy, the Duke looked him fairly down, and then rumped him without mercy.
WiktionaryWhen Lord Carteret and the Earl of Sunderland went to court in 1734 to pay their respects after the marriage of Carteret's daughter to Sunderland's brother, John Spencer, MP, the king turned his back
WiktionaryBefore executing Charles I, the Rump made it illegal to proclaim anyone else king to replace him.
WiktionarySometimes I feel like kicking my own rump.
Tatoeba · #264095i Register
In some senses, rump is marked as slang, vulgar, UK, British, historical. Watch for register when choosing this word.