English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

Mid-16th century. From wamble (nausea) +‎ cropped (stomached).

Adjective edit

wamble-cropped (comparative more wamble-cropped, superlative most wamble-cropped)

  1. (slang) Sick from excessive eating or drinking.
    • 1854, Ann Sophia Stephens, High Life in New York:
      looking as peaked and wamble-cropped as a sick lamb
    • 2007, Michael C. White, Soul Catcher:
      He was wamble-cropped in the bowels, complaining of stomach pains and cramps, followed by bouts of uncontrollable diarrhea.
  2. (archaic, slang) Crestfallen; dejected.
    • 1922, John Herbert Quick, Vandemark's Folly:
      I felt just as good as any one, but I was a little wamble-cropped when I thought that I shouldn't know how to behave.

Quotations edit

  • 1897, Bernard Capes, The Lake of Wine:
    I rode over early to ask if you'd put up for the Wilton hunt, and found your furniture here unpackin' and Dennis lookin' on, like a wamble-cropped sentryman.
  • 2022, Michael Fraser, The Day-Breakers:
    The buckfever, wamble-cropped air swells with the spiced aroma

Synonyms edit

References edit