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Definition of galumph verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

galumph

verb
 
/ɡəˈlʌmf/
 
/ɡəˈlʌmf/
[intransitive] (informal)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they galumph
 
/ɡəˈlʌmf/
 
/ɡəˈlʌmf/
he / she / it galumphs
 
/ɡəˈlʌmfs/
 
/ɡəˈlʌmfs/
past simple galumphed
 
/ɡəˈlʌmft/
 
/ɡəˈlʌmft/
past participle galumphed
 
/ɡəˈlʌmft/
 
/ɡəˈlʌmft/
-ing form galumphing
 
/ɡəˈlʌmfɪŋ/
 
/ɡəˈlʌmfɪŋ/
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  1. + adv./prep. to move in a heavy, careless or noisy way
    • Who’s that galumphing around upstairs?
    Word Origin1871 (in the sense ‘prance in triumph’): coined by Lewis Carroll in Through the Looking Glass; perhaps a blend of gallop and triumph.
See galumph in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
trait
noun
 
 
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