See also: tumtum and tum tum

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology 1 edit

Uncertain. Perhaps onomatopoeia (of hooves or footfalls); compare tuk-tuk. Perhaps from tandem.

Noun edit

tum-tum (plural tum-tums)

  1. (India) A dog cart; a rickshaw; a kind of vehicle.
    • 1914, Alice Maud Pennell, Pennell of the Afghan Frontier: The Life of Theodore Leighton Pennell, M.D., B. SC., F.R.C.S. Kaisar-i-Hind Medal for Public Service in India, page 414:
      An optimistic old man was our driver; he needed all his optimism too, for his tum-tum was one of the most rickety I've seen , and his little pony very tiny. The balance of this vehicle was most important; we had to sit in certain definite positions ...
    • 1924, EM Forster, A Passage to India, Penguin, published 2005, page 49:
      His fellow assistant, Dr Panna Lal, was in ecstasies at the prospect, and was urgent that they should attend it together in his new tum-tum.

Etymology 2 edit

Borrowed fom Twi Akan tumtum (mashed green bananas).[1]

Noun edit

tum-tum (uncountable)

  1. A dish made in the West Indies by beating boiled plantain in a wooden mortar until it is soft.

Etymology 3 edit

Reduplication of tum, a shortened form of tummy.

Noun edit

tum-tum (plural tum-tums)

  1. (childish, informal) Stomach.
    Can't eat - my tum-tum's hurting.
    • 2000, Joy Masoff, Oh, Yuck!: The Encyclopedia of Everything Nasty, Workman Publishing, published 2000, →ISBN, page 188:
      Take a little food and stir in some GASTRIC JUICE, which is made fresh daily by the 35 million glands that line your tum-tum.
  2. (childish, informal) Abdomen.
    The dog likes having its tum-tum rubbed.
    • 2011, Joanne Kimes, Leslie Young, Pregnancy Sucks: What to Do When Your Miracle Makes You Miserable, Adams Media, →ISBN, page 172:
      The Internet is full of sites where you can buy everything you need to make a plaster mold of your tum-tum.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:tum-tum.
Synonyms edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lise Winer, Dictionary of the English/Creole of Trinidad & Tobago: On Historical Principles (2009, McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, →ISBN), page 921: "tum-tum, tom-tom n Tob [...] < Twi tumtum 'mashed green bananas', Kikongo ntóoto 'ripe banana')"

Anagrams edit