coom
English
Etymology 1
This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.
Noun
coom (uncountable)
Etymology 2
See come.
Verb
coom (third-person singular simple present cooms, present participle cooming, simple past and past participle coomed)
- Pronunciation spelling of come.
- 1838–1839, Charles Dickens, The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby, Chapman and Hall (1839), chapter XLII, page 411:
- “Not a bit,” replied the Yorkshireman, extending his mouth from ear to ear. “There I lay, snoog in schoolmeasther’s bed long efther it was dark, and nobody coom nigh the pleace. ‘Weel!’ thinks I, ‘he’s got a pretty good start, and if he bean’t whoam by noo, he never will be; so you may coom as quick as you loike, and foind us reddy’—that is, you know, schoolmeasther might coom.”
- 1838–1839, Charles Dickens, The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby, Chapman and Hall (1839), chapter XLII, page 411:
Etymology 3
Noun
coom (plural cooms)