suburbanreuben":1fjex4un said:
GoldenEraMTB":1fjex4un said:
suburbanreuben":1fjex4un said:
None so good as "Chump" though.
Oldies are definately goodies!
I thought "chump" was ours, so I didn't include it...I grew up saying that here in NYC
I think Laurel & Hardy's classic, "A Chump at Oxford" spread it's use on both sides of the pond. I can't remember hearing it used in the film though...
Sorry my American friends, but "Chump" first appeared in English in the early 1700s meaning "lump of wood" (possibly from a melding of "chunk" and "lump"), and by the late 1880s had acquired its modern derogatory meaning of "blockhead" or "fool." The term "chump change" seems to have first appeared in the African-American community in the late 1960s with the meaning of "small change, a negligible amount of money." The sense of the term is "an amount of money only a chump would value; a trivial amount," as opposed to larger amounts of "real money."
Ahhh google......