galumph gə-ˈləm(p)f verb
: move around heavily and clumsily
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The word galumph has appeared in five articles on NYTimes.com in the past year, including on March 7 in the exhibition review “T. Rex Like You Haven’t Seen Him: With Feathers” by Jason Farago:
Surprisingly cute in his youth, more intelligent than his peers, he eventually grew into a ruthless, bloodthirsty wrecker who made you want to run for your life. No, we’re not talking about a relationship gone wrong. This is a piece about tyrannosaurs, the undefeated bosses of the Cretaceous Period, stomping and chomping their way across earth’s northern supercontinent.
…. Though T. rex galumphed in what is now western North America, it has a New York pedigree, too; it was curators at this museum who first discovered this massive predator, and brought its bones from Hell Creek, Mont., to Central Park West. (“The prize fighter of antiquity,” tooted this newspaper when the skeleton first went on display in 1906.)
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