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blimp. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
blimp, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
blimp in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
blimp you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Etymology
Origin not entirely certain. However, most historians believe that it is onomatopoeia for the sound a blimp makes when thumped. Although there is some disagreement among historians, credit for coining the term is usually given to Lt. A.D. Cunningham of the British Royal Navy in 1915.
There is an often repeated, but false, alternative explanation for the term. The erroneous story is that at some time in the early 20th century, the United States military had two classes for airships: Type A-rigid and Type B-limp, hence “blimp”. In fact, A. D. Topping reports on the “Etymology of ‘Blimp’”, in the AAHS Journal, Winter 1963, that:
- “there was no American ‘A-class’ of airships as such—all military aircraft, heavier or lighter-than-air were designated with ‘A’ until the appearance of B-class airships in May 1917. There was an American B airship—but there seems to be no record of any official designation of non-rigids as ‘limp’. Further, according to the Oxford Dictionary, the first appearance of the word in print was in 1916, in England, a year before the first B-class airship.”
J.R.R. Tolkien speculated that the word was a portmanteau word deriving from 'blister' and 'lump': 'the vowel i not u was chosen because of its diminutive significance -- typical of war humour'
Pronunciation
Noun
blimp (plural blimps)
- (aviation) An airship constructed with a non-rigid lifting agent container.
- 2004 February 16&23, The New Yorker:
The Goodyear blimp over Giants Stadium
- (by extension) Any large airborne inflatable.
- (slang) An obese person.
- A person similar to the cartoon character Colonel Blimp; a pompous, reactionary British man.
- (film, television) A soundproof cover for a video camera.
- Synonym: barney
2015, Peter W. Rea, David K. Irving, Producing and Directing the Short Film and Video, page 209:You can create your own blimp or barney with anything that will deaden the camera noise, such as a changing bag, foam rubber, […]
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Translations
airship
- Arabic: مُنْطَاد ذُو مُحَرِّك (munṭād ḏū muḥarrik)
- Bulgarian: възду́шен ко́раб m (vǎzdúšen kórab)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 軟式小型飛船 / 软式小型飞船 (ruǎnshìxiǎoxíngfēichuán)
- Czech: neztužená vzducholoď f
- Dutch: blimp, (colloquially) zeppelin (nl) m
- Finnish: ilmalaiva (fi)
- French: ballon dirigeable (fr) m, dirigeable (fr) m
- German: Zeppelin (de) m (normal), Prallluftschiff n (technical, officialese), Blimp m (technical, informal)
- Hebrew: סְפִינַת אֲוִיר / ספינת אוויר (he) (sfinat avir)
- Hungarian: léghajó (hu)
- Icelandic: loftskip (is) n
- Italian: dirigibile floscio m
- Japanese: 飛行船 (ja) (ひこうせん, hikōsen), 軟式飛行船 (なんしきひこうせん, nanshiki hikōsen)
- Korean: 소형 연식 비행선 (sohyeong yeonsik bihaengseon)
- Polish: sterowiec (pl) m, sterowiec ciśnieniowy m
- Portuguese: dirigível (pt) m
- Romanian: dirijabil (ro) n
- Russian: мя́гкий дирижа́бль m (mjáxkij dirižáblʹ), дирижа́бль (ru) m (dirižáblʹ)
- Spanish: dirigible (es) m
- Swedish: blimp
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Verb
blimp (third-person singular simple present blimps, present participle blimping, simple past and past participle blimped)
- (slang, intransitive) To expand like a blimp or balloon; to become fat.
- (transitive) To fit (a video camera) with a soundproof cover.
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Further reading
Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from English blimp.
Noun
blimp n (plural blimpuri)
- blimp
Declension