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51Թ History and Origins
Origin of mumpsimus1
First recorded in 1520–30; from a story, perhaps originating with Erasmus, of an illiterate Catholic priest who, while saying the postcommunion prayer at Mass, said mumpsimus rather than ūܲ (1st-person plural perfect of Latin ū “to take, take up”): “Quod ōre ūܲ, Domine, pūrā mente capiāmus” (“What we have taken by mouth, O Lord, may we keep with a pure mind”) and refused to change the word when corrected; consume ( def )
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
We are not going to change our old 'mumpsimus' for anybody's new 'sumpsimus.'
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Such a deliberate preference of “mumpsimus” to “sumpsimus” is by no means calculated to conciliate favour, or even to win respect.
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So the reformers who call it “mulligatunny” are just as bad as we devotees of mumpsimus and mulligatawny ourselves.
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On being remonstrated with, he retorted that “He would not leave his old mumpsimus for their new sumpsimus.”
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And now let all defenders of present institutions, however bad they may be—let all violent supporters of their old mumpsimus against any new sumpsimus whatever, listen to a conversation among some undergraduates.
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