gammon

views updated May 18 2018

gam·mon1 / ˈgamən/ • n. ham that has been cured or smoked like bacon. ∎  the bottom piece of a side of bacon, including a hind leg.gam·mon2 • n. a victory in backgammon (carrying a double score) in which the winner removes all their pieces before the loser has removed any.• v. [tr.] defeat (a backgammon opponent) in such a way.gam·mon3 inf., dated, chiefly Brit. • n. nonsense; rubbish.• v. [tr.] hoax or deceive (someone).

gammon

views updated May 29 2018

gammon nonsense, rubbish. First recorded in the early 18th century; the origin is uncertain, but the term was first used in criminals' slang in give gammon ‘give cover to (a pickpocket)’ and keep in gammon ‘distract (a victim) for a pickpocket’.
gammon and spinach ‘nonsense, humbug’; with a pun on gammon ‘bacon, ham’. The words gammon and spinach are part of the refrain to the song ‘A frog he would a-wooing go’, and the term is used by Dickens: Miss Mowcher in David Copperfield (1850) says, ‘What a world of gammon and spinnage it is, though, ain't it!’.

gammon

views updated May 17 2018

gammon Hind legs of pig, cured while still part of the carcass. Ham is the same part of the pig but is cured after removal from the carcass. See also bacon; pork.

gammon

views updated May 18 2018

gammon2 lashing of the bowsprit. XVII. perh. identical with prec., the allusion being to the tying up of a gammon or ham.

gammon

views updated May 29 2018

gammon1 †ham XV; joint of bacon XVI. — ONF. gambon (modF. jambon) ham, f. gambe leg.

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