gamb
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Middle French gambe (variant of jambe) from Late Latin gamba (hoof, leg, shank). Doublet of jamb, gamba, and gam.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ɡamb/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ɡæmb/
- Rhymes: -æmb
Noun
gamb (plural gambs)
- (heraldry) The leg or shank, typically of an animal, especially of a lion, on a coat of arms, crest, etc.
- 1817, Alexander Deuchar, British Crests: containing the crests and mottos of the families of Great Britain and Ireland; together with those of the principal cities; and a glossary of heraldic terms ... Embellished with nearly fourteen hundred crests, engraved by Robert Kirkwood, from original drawings, by G. Sanders, and J. Grant, page 284:
- Vachell, Eng. a bull's gamb in pale, couped, argent. […] Vaughan of Littleton, Middlesex, a lion's gamb, or, holding a human heart, gules.
- (slang) A person's leg; gam.
- 1954, Gerald Kersh, Guttersnipe: Little Novels, page 211:
- […] but Heavens above what a pair of gambs! Stems. What the vulgar call legs.
Usage notes
- Compare jambe, which can refer to a human or animal leg, the former especially if in armor.
Related terms
- See related terms of gamba
Further reading
- “gamb, n.”, in Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd edition, Oxford University Press, March 2013, retrieved December 2018
- “gamb”, in Merriam Webster, December 2018 (last accessed)