出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/03/13 03:41 UTC 版)
From 中期英語 *gammon, gambon, from Old French gambon (compare modern French jambon (“ham”)), from gambe (“leg”), from Late Latin gamba, from Ancient Greek καμπή (kampḗ). Doublet of jambon and jamon.
gammon (countable and uncountable, plural gammons)
gammon (third-person singular simple present gammons, present participle gammoning, simple past and past participle gammoned)
From 中期英語 gamenen, gamene, from 古期英語 gamnian, gæmnian, gamenian (“to joke, play”), from Proto-West Germanic *gamanōn, from Proto-Germanic *gamanōną (“to play, have fun, joke”). Cognate with Middle High German gamenen (“to mock, make fun of”), Icelandic gamna (“to have fun”). More at game.
gammon (third-person singular simple present gammons, present participle gammoning, simple past and past participle gammoned)
gammon (countable and uncountable, plural gammons)
Perhaps related to the first etymology, with reference to tying up a ham.
gammon (plural gammons)
gammon (third-person singular simple present gammons, present participle gammoning, simple past and past participle gammoned)
gammon (third-person singular simple present gammons, present participle gammoning, simple past and past participle gammoned)
gammon (comparative more gammon, superlative most gammon)
Gained popularity in 2017 (in the phrase "Great Wall of Gammon", likening the referents' rosy complexions to gammon (“ham, bacon”)), although the metaphor was in use earlier: the BBC points to a 2016 use of “gammon face”.
gammon (countable and uncountable, plural gammons)
| ・Gammon | |
| ・classist | |
| ・Moscow | |
| ・pleading | |
| ・stimulus | |
| ・solution to | |
| ・peace process | |
| ・instituted | |
| ・disc | |
| ・Athens |