See also: Gambol Gamboled Gambolled Gambling Gambled Gambolling Gambit Gamble Gambino Gambler Gambrel Gambeson Gamba Gamblers
1. Gambol (n.) gambol. (n.) "frolic, merrymaking," 1590s, earlier Gambolde "a skipping, a leap or spring" (1510s), from French gambade (15c.), from Late Latin gamba "horse's hock or leg," from Greek kampē "a bending" (on notion of "a joint"); see campus
Gambol, Gambolde, Gambade, Gamba, Greek
2. Gambol traces all the way back to the Greek word kampe, which means “bending joint or ligament,” and was adapted into the Late Latin gamba, meaning “a horse’s leg.”This word was then adapted into the Middle French noun gambade and verb gambader.The noun evolved into the early 16th century English word Gambolde, meaning “a jump or skip,” before arriving in its …
Gambol, Greek, Gamba, Gambade, Gambader, Gambolde
3. Gambolde Productions As a fashion editor, I will be able to influence future trends and styles
Gambolde
4. Gambolde Productions at 4:51 PM No comments: Labels: EOC
Gambolde
5. {{11}}gambol (n.) frolic, merrymaking, 1590s, originally Gambolde a leap or spring (c.1500), from M.Fr
Gambol, Gambolde
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Gambolde
GAMBOLDE [ˈɡambəl]
Kids Definition of gambol. : to run or play happily : frolic Children gamboled on the lawn. Comments on gambol. What made you want to look up gambol?
Strafe is able to gambol about much as usual, though he limps a little and is thinner for his experience. Would that we were like unto these ewe lambs, that we might frisk and gambol among them without evil.
[Alteration of French gambade, horse's jump, from Old French, perhaps from Old Italian gambata, from gamba, leg, from Late Latin, hoof, from Greek kampē, bend (as in a limb) .] American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
gamble – to bet; to take a chance on; venture; hazard; speculation; flyer: I’ll take a gamble on the chance that I’ll win. To leap about playfully; frolic.