stummy

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Shortening of stomach.

Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

stummy (plural stummies)

  1. (colloquial, chiefly obsolete) stomach, tummy
    • 1859, Jacques Maurice, James Willard Morris, K.N. Pepper, and other condiments[1], page 233:
      "Poor Stummy [which playful Term means Stomach], he gits Sick."
    • 1879, Graeme Mercer Adam, George Stewart, eds, The Canadian Monthly[2], volume 2, page 527:
      'I like my little stummy,' he had once frankly observed, on being rallied on his devotion to the delicacies of the table.
    • 1896, Exposures of Quackery Being a Series of Articles Upon, and Analyses Of, Various Patent Medicines, Volumes 1-2[3], page 136:
      One little Cowes boy,/ His “stummy” felt so bad;/ Fennings gave him but one dose,/ And that settled the —/ Confound it! Our pen has suddenly become prosaic again; neither “ stomach-ache” nor “ bowel complaint ” will rhyme to “bad,” and we ...
    • 1909, The Pedagogical Seminary, page 89:
      I'm so soft (pointing to herself) in my stummy.
    • 2000, The 1898 Baseball Fe-As-Ko, page 173:
      I sucked my stummy in some and replied, []

Derived terms[edit]