dimber-damber

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

dimber-damber (plural dimber-dambers)

  1. Alternative form of dimber damber
    • 1859, George Washington Matsell, “Scene in a London Flash-Panny”, in The Vocabulum: or Rogues Lexicon, New York: George W. Matsell & Co:
      No, Jim, I only piked into Deuceaville with a dimber-damber, who couldn't pad the hoof for a single darkman's without his bloss to keep him from getting pogy.
    • 1947, Thomas Bertram Costain, For my great folly: and, The moneyman. Two famous novels by Thomas B. Costrain, page 240:
      "He'll make hisself the dimber-damber in hell," declared another.
    • 1996, Alan Garner, Strandloper, page 84:
      Renter lifted up a tin mug of lime juice and vinegar, and poured it over William's head, and shouted for all to hear: "I, dimber-damber and upright-man, with this gage of bowse, do Stall thee, Crank Cuffin, to the Rogue!..."
    • 2010, Jeffery Farnol, F. Vaux Wilson, Our Admirable Betty, →ISBN, page 274:
      Not me, Jerry — there 's one a-coming as will tip you the lay — an old pal, Jerry, a flaming buck o' the high pad, a reg'lar dimber-damber, a — hist ! 'T is him at last, I think, but ha' your popps ready in case, Jerry.