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Origin and history of ump

ump(n.)

short for umpire (n.), by 1915, American English.

Entries linking to ump

"an arbitrator, mediator, one who decides when others do not agree," mid-14c., noumper, from Old French nonper "odd number, not even," in reference to a third person to arbitrate between two, from non "not" (see non-) + per "equal," from Latin par "equal" (see par (n.)). Originally legal; the gaming sense is recorded by 1714 (in wrestling).

The initial -n- began to be lost by c. 1400 due to faulty separation of a noumpere, heard as an oumpere; see N. The various surviving copies of the popular "Piers Plowman" (late 14c.) have the word in the same place as "a noumpere," "nounpere," "nounpiere," "vmper," "ompere," "nompeyr."

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    Trends of ump

    adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

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