jimp
English
editAdjective
editjimp (comparative jimper, superlative jimpest)
- (dated, Scotland and N England) neat; trim; delicate
- 1899, Neil Munro, Gilian the Dreamer[1], HTML edition, The Gutenberg Project, published 2007:
- Do I look so terrible old, Gilian, that you cannot think of me as not so bad-looking either, with a bonny eye, they said, and a jimp waist, and a foot like the honey-bee?
- 1994, George MacDonald Fraser, Flashman and the Angel of the Lord, Reprint edition, HarperCollins, published 2011, →ISBN:
- … Annette was on hand, stony-eyed but mighty jimp in a gown that seemed to consist of flowers and gauze.
- (dated, Scotland and N England) scant; barely sufficient.
Noun
editjimp (plural jimps)
- A notch on the spine of a knife blade to increase grip, usually in sets of three or more (jimping).
- Such a notch elsewhere on the knife (handle scales, liner lock, choil) for the same purpose (grippiness).