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cramp. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
cramp, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
cramp in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
cramp you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Etymology
From Middle English crampe, from Old French crampe (“cramp”), from Frankish *krampa (“cramp”), from Proto-West Germanic *krampu, from Proto-Germanic *krampō (“cramp, clasp”). Distant relative of English crop.
Pronunciation
Noun
cramp (countable and uncountable, plural cramps)
- A painful contraction of a muscle which cannot be controlled; (sometimes) a similar pain even without noticeable contraction.
- Hyponyms: charley horse, writer's cramp
- Coordinate term: twinge
- August 1534, Margaret Roper (or Thomas More in her name), letter to Alice Alington
- the cramp also that divers nights gripeth him in his legs.
- That which confines or contracts.
- Synonyms: restraint, shackle, hindrance
1781 (date written), William Cowper, “Truth”, in Poems, London: J Johnson, , published 1782, →OCLC, page 96:How does it grate upon his thankleſs ear, / Crippling his pleaſures with the cramp of fear!
- A clamp for carpentry or masonry.
- A piece of wood having a curve corresponding to that of the upper part of the instep, on which the upper leather of a boot is stretched to give it the requisite shape.
Derived terms
Translations
painful contraction of a muscle
- Albanian: ngërth (sq) m
- Amharic: መሸማቀቅ (mäšämaḳäḳ)
- Arabic: تَشَنُّج m (tašannuj), شَدٌّ عَضَلِيّ m (šaddun ʕaḍaliyy)
- Armenian: please add this translation if you can
- Belarusian: сутарга f (sutarha), спазма f (spazma)
- Bikol Central: kalambre (bcl)
- Bulgarian: схващане (bg) n (shvaštane), спазъм (bg) m (spazǎm)
- Catalan: rampa (ca) f
- Cebuano: kalambre
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 抽筋 (cau1 gan1)
- Mandarin: 抽筋(兒) / 抽筋(儿) (zh) (chōujīn)
- Czech: křeč (cs) f
- Dutch: kramp (nl) m
- Esperanto: kramfo
- Finnish: kramppi (fi), lihaskramppi (fi), suonenveto (fi), kouristus (fi)
- French: crampe (fr) f
- Galician: cambra f, breca (gl) f
- German: Krampf (de) m
- Greek: κράμπα (el) f (krámpa)
- Hiligaynon: palamusug, busug (of the stomach), duklong (of the stomach), palaminhod (of the legs)
- Hungarian: görcs (hu)
- Ilocano: betteg
- Indonesian: keram (id), kejang (id)
- Irish: féith-chrapadh m
- Italian: crampo (it) m
- Japanese: 痙攣 (ja) (keiren)
- Kabuverdianu: kaiambra
- Korean: 쥐 (ko) (jwi)
- Latin: pnix f
- Malay: kejangan
- Maori: kuiki, kaurapa (specific to the legs), hakoko, uauawhiti, parerori, uhu, kohukohu, kokohu
- Mapudungun: trekefün
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: krampe (no) m
- Nynorsk: krampe m
- Old English: hramma
- Pangasinan: kelat, polikat, alibuegbueg
- Plautdietsch: Kraump f
- Polish: skurcz (pl) m
- Portuguese: cãibra (pt)
- Romanian: crampă (ro) f, cârcel (ro) m
- Russian: спазм (ru) m (spazm), су́дорога (ru) f (súdoroga)
- Serbo-Croatian: spazam, grč (sh) m
- Slovak: kŕč m
- Slovene: krč (sl) m
- Spanish: calambre (es) m, rampa (es) f, acalambramiento m, arratonamiento m
- Swedish: kramp (sv) c
- Tagalog: pulikat
- Thai: ตะคริว (dtà-kriu)
- Turkish: kramp (tr)
- Ukrainian: судо́ма (uk) f (sudóma)
- Venetan: sgranfo (vec) m, sgranf m
- Vietnamese: chuột rút (vi), vọp bẻ (vi)
- Waray-Waray: kalambre, banhod, bikog
|
clamp for carpentry or masonry
— see clamp
piece of wood used to shape boot
Translations to be checked
Verb
cramp (third-person singular simple present cramps, present participle cramping, simple past and past participle cramped)
- (intransitive) (of a muscle) To contract painfully and uncontrollably.
- (transitive) To affect with cramps or spasms.
- 1936, Heinrich Hauser, Once Your Enemy (translated from the German by Norman Gullick)
- The collar of the tunic scratched my neck, the steel helmet made my head ache, and the puttees cramped my leg muscles.
- (transitive, figurative) To prohibit movement or expression of.
You're cramping my style.
1853, Austen Henry Layard, Discoveries in the Ruins of Nineveh and Babylon:But the front of the animal , which was in full , was narrow and cramped , and unequal in dignity to the side
- (transitive) To restrain to a specific physical position, as if with a cramp.
You're going to need to cramp the wheels on this hill.
- To fasten or hold with, or as if with, a cramp iron.
- (by extension) To bind together; to unite.
- To form on a cramp.
to cramp boot legs
Derived terms
Translations
to contract painfully and uncontrollably
to prohibit movement or expression
to restrain to a specific physical position
Adjective
cramp (comparative more cramp, superlative most cramp)
- (archaic) cramped; narrow
1871, David Masson, The Life of John Milton:[…] the result was those folio volumes of MSS. now in the British Museum, in which inquirers into the history of that period find so much interesting material in such a confused state and in such a dreadfully cramp handwriting.
References
Manx
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Adjective
cramp
- intricate, complex
Derived terms
Mutation