English edit

Verb edit

thrumming

  1. present participle and gerund of thrum

Noun edit

thrumming (plural thrummings)

  1. The sound or action of something that thrums.
    • 1847 January – 1848 July, William Makepeace Thackeray, chapter 20, in Vanity Fair [], London: Bradbury and Evans [], published 1848, →OCLC:
      Those unfortunate and well-educated women made themselves heard from the neighbouring drawing-room, where they were thrumming away, with hard fingers, an elaborate music-piece on the piano-forte, as their mother spoke; and indeed, they were at music, or at backboard, or at geography, or at history, the whole day long.
    • 1870, The African Repository and Colonial Journal, volume 46, page 231:
      The harp itself was a huge gourd, and a most unmusical "shell" it proved to be. It had three strings, the thrummings of which disquieted me on two accounts []