BrianMac

By BrianMac

Scrumping Time ...

One of our regular visiting collared doves perched in the apple tree.

In the UK, or maybe even specifically southern England, "scrumping" means to steal apples from someone else's tree or orchard.

It might sound like an immemorial practice, and probably is, but the word for it is surprisingly modern — the earliest example is from 1866. The source is uncertain but seems to be from a dialect term meaning something withered, shrivelled or dried up. It may be linked to the old adjective scrimp, scanty or meagre, from which we get the verb scrimp, to economise or be thrifty.

Support for this comes from an early meaning of scrumping, which referred to taking windfalls or the small apples left on the trees after harvest. This evolved into illicitly taking any sort of apples

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