Word of the Day

: October 16, 2011

bumbershoot

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noun BUM-ber-shoot

What It Means

: umbrella

bumbershoot in Context

Noticing that a light rain had just begun to fall, Grandpa turned to Susie and said, "Don't forget to take your bumbershoot!"

"The Camas Days parade featured vintage cars; rodeo royalty mounted on horses; and the Lacamas Shores Rain or Shine Umbrella Drill Team, which wowed the crowd with their bright orange bumbershoots -- not that anyone needed them." -- Kathie Durbin, The Columbian (Vancouver, WA), July 23, 2011


Did You Know?

Umbrellas have plenty of nicknames. In Britain, “brolly” is a popular alternative to the more staid “umbrella.” Sarah Gamp, a fictional nurse who toted a particularly large umbrella in Charles Dickens’s novel Martin Chuzzlewit, has inspired some English speakers to dub oversize versions “gamps.” “Bumbershoot” is a predominantly American nickname, one that has been recorded as a whimsical, slightly irreverent handle for umbrellas since the late 1890s. As with most slang terms, the origins of “bumbershoot” are a bit foggy, but it appears that the “bumber” is a modification of the “umbr-” in “umbrella” and the “shoot” is an alteration of the “-chute” in “parachute” (since an open parachute looks a little like an umbrella).



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