|
发表于 2009-10-24 23:59:21
|
|阅读模式
galumph
\guh-LUHM(P)F\ , intransitive verb:
1.To move in a clumsy manner or with a heavy tread.
不及物动词 vi.
1.【口】得意扬扬地走;发出响声地走(或跑)
Quotes:
Then he climbed up the little iron ladder that led to the wharf's cap, placed me once more upon his shoulders and galumphed off again.
~Alistair MacLeod, Island: The Complete Stories
Lizards patrol the . . . landscape, and giant tortoises galumph on the beaches.
~Peter M. Nichols, "Galápagos", New York Times, March 30, 2001
As their owners ride tandem bikes, fly kites or run on the beach the dogs galumph alongside their masters grinning, I love you even if you are incontinent.
~Ken Foster, Dog Culture: Writers on the Character of Canines
Origin:
Galumph is probably an alteration of gallop. It was coined by Lewis Carroll in the nonsense poem "Jabberwocky." |
|