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LUMPY STEVENS

  • Lumpy Stevens
  • English cricketer (1735 – 1819)

    was always called "Lumpy" in contemporary scorecards and reports. Stevens was born in 1735 at Send, Surrey. The beginning of Stevens' career, in 1756,

    Lumpy Stevens

    Lumpy_Stevens

  • Lumpy
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Kangaroo Tim Herron (born 1970), American golfer Lumpy Stevens (1735–1819), English cricketer Lumpy Ridge, Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, United

    Lumpy

    Lumpy

  • Wicket
  • Aspect of the game of cricket

    game of wicket. The third (middle) stump was introduced in 1775, after Lumpy Stevens bowled three successive deliveries to John Small that went straight

    Wicket

    Wicket

    Wicket

  • Edward Stevens
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Edward or Ed Stevens may refer to: Edward Stevens (general) (1745–1820), American general in the revolutionary war Lumpy Stevens (Edward Stevens, 1735–1819)

    Edward Stevens

    Edward_Stevens

  • Laws of Cricket
  • Rules of the sport of cricket

    lucrative single wicket match was played between Five of Kent (with Lumpy Stevens) and Five of Hambledon (with Thomas White). Kent batted first and made

    Laws of Cricket

    Laws_of_Cricket

  • Pitched delivery bowling
  • Type of bowling in cricket

    Colchin at the beginning of his career and the likes of John Small and Lumpy Stevens at the end. As described in History of cricket to 1725, early cricketers

    Pitched delivery bowling

    Pitched_delivery_bowling

  • List of English cricketers (1701–1786)
  • Cricketers of the 18th century before the foundation of MCC

    1744, but did not take part. They are not mentioned in other sources. Lumpy Stevens Chertsey and Surrey 1769 One of the greatest bowlers of the underarm

    List of English cricketers (1701–1786)

    List_of_English_cricketers_(1701–1786)

  • History of cricket
  • Their most notable opponent was the Chertsey and Surrey bowler Edward "Lumpy" Stevens, who is believed to have been the main proponent of the flighted delivery

    History of cricket

    History of cricket

    History_of_cricket

  • Surrey county cricket team (pre-1846)
  • Historical English cricket team

    Charles Bennet, 4th Earl of Tankerville. Noted Surrey players included Lumpy Stevens, William Yalden, and Billy Beldham. The present Surrey County Cricket

    Surrey county cricket team (pre-1846)

    Surrey_county_cricket_team_(pre-1846)

  • Underarm bowling
  • Cricket terminology

    good effect was Edward "Lumpy" Stevens of Chertsey and Surrey. There is a surviving rhyme about him to the effect that "honest Lumpy did allow he ne'er would

    Underarm bowling

    Underarm_bowling

  • Berkshire county cricket team (18th century)
  • Historical English cricket team

    Old Field in Bray between the Maidenhead and Risborough clubs with Lumpy Stevens assisting the former, while a player called Briggs was a given man for

    Berkshire county cricket team (18th century)

    Berkshire_county_cricket_team_(18th_century)

  • Surrey County Cricket Club
  • English cricket club

    its greatest players during the underarm era were the famous bowler Lumpy Stevens and the wicket-keeper/batsman William Yalden, who both belonged to the

    Surrey County Cricket Club

    Surrey County Cricket Club

    Surrey_County_Cricket_Club

  • 1764 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    of the greatest 18th century players: Richard Nyren, John Small, and Lumpy Stevens. Chertsey hosted Hambledon 10 and 11 September on Laleham Burway. Hambledon

    1764 English cricket season

    1764_English_cricket_season

  • Charles Bennet, 4th Earl of Tankerville
  • British nobleman, collector of shells and famous patron of Surrey cricket

    of Lumpy Stevens, who was a gardener at Tankerville's Walton-on-Thames estate; and William Bedster, who was his butler. It was the accuracy of "Lumpy" Stevens

    Charles Bennet, 4th Earl of Tankerville

    Charles Bennet, 4th Earl of Tankerville

    Charles_Bennet,_4th_Earl_of_Tankerville

  • 1775 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    runs. Kent won despite having been 53 behind after the first innings. Lumpy Stevens, playing as a given man for Kent, took eight all-bowled wickets (including

    1775 English cricket season

    1775_English_cricket_season

  • 1735 in Great Britain
  • sculptor and artist (died 1805) John Barrow, Catholic priest (died 1811) Lumpy Stevens, cricketer (died 1819) 12 January – John Eccles, composer (born 1668)

    1735 in Great Britain

    1735_in_Great_Britain

  • White Conduit Club
  • Historical English cricket team

    Famous players who represented WCC include the professionals John Small, Lumpy Stevens, Tom Taylor and Tom Walker. Records of many WCC matches are known to

    White Conduit Club

    White Conduit Club

    White_Conduit_Club

  • Leave It to Beaver
  • American television sitcom (1957–1963)

    1957 – February 24, 1962) Frank Bank as Clarence "Lumpy" Rutherford Richard Deacon as Fred Rutherford, Lumpy's pompous, demanding father and Ward Cleaver's

    Leave It to Beaver

    Leave_It_to_Beaver

  • Single wicket cricket
  • bowler Lumpy Stevens beat Hampshire batsman John Small three times with the ball going through the two stump wicket of the day. As a result of Stevens' protests

    Single wicket cricket

    Single_wicket_cricket

  • 1786 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    team-mate Tom Taylor scored 117. Kent needed 262 to win, but WCC also had Lumpy Stevens and David Harris in their team. Kent were bowled out for 97. The centuries

    1786 English cricket season

    1786_English_cricket_season

  • 1787 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    and then dismissed Winchilsea's XI for 84 (Thomas Taylor 23 not out; Lumpy Stevens 3w). In their second innings, Mann's XI scored 123 (Tom Walker 40; David

    1787 English cricket season

    1787 English cricket season

    1787_English_cricket_season

  • 1819 in sports
  • fights involving him are recorded in 1819. Events 7 September — death of Lumpy Stevens, arguably the greatest bowler of the 18th century England Most runs

    1819 in sports

    1819_in_sports

  • 1771 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    of Tankerville, a patron of Surrey in the 1770s and the employer of Lumpy Stevens, who was a gardener at Tankerville's Walton-on-Thames estate. Tankerville

    1771 English cricket season

    1771_English_cricket_season

  • Pearl (Steven Universe)
  • Fictional character

    Retrieved 2016-05-12. Medina, ND (2015-07-17). "Steven Universe Episode Recap 'Friend Ship': We Are The Lumpy Clods". iDigitalTimes. Archived from the original

    Pearl (Steven Universe)

    Pearl (Steven Universe)

    Pearl_(Steven_Universe)

  • John Frame (cricketer)
  • English cricketer (1733–1796)

    Frame was an outstanding fast bowler who was favourably compared with Lumpy Stevens. Like all bowlers of his time, he used an underarm action. In the first

    John Frame (cricketer)

    John_Frame_(cricketer)

  • 1780 in sports
  • England Most runs – Joseph Miller and James Aylward 142 Most wickets – Lumpy Stevens 18 Events Inaugural running of The Derby, sometimes called the Epsom

    1780 in sports

    1780 in sports

    1780_in_sports

  • Chertsey Cricket Club
  • Historical English cricket team

    several famous players in the 18th century, including William Yalden, Lumpy Stevens, Thomas Quiddington, and John Wood. The club's main patron was Charles

    Chertsey Cricket Club

    Chertsey_Cricket_Club

  • 1773 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    Sueter, Richard Nyren, George Leer and Thomas Brett. England's five were Lumpy Stevens, John Minshull, Joseph Miller, Dick May and Will Palmer. England scored

    1773 English cricket season

    1773_English_cricket_season

  • Professional and amateur status in first-class cricket
  • English cricket player status

    between patron and professional in the 18th century. In later years, Lumpy Stevens and John Minshull were employed by their patrons as a gardener and gamekeeper

    Professional and amateur status in first-class cricket

    Professional_and_amateur_status_in_first-class_cricket

  • 1780 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    of Kent (with William Bedster) and Five of the Hambledon Club (with Lumpy Stevens). The other Kent players were James Aylward, William Bullen, Robert

    1780 English cricket season

    1780_English_cricket_season

  • John Small (cricketer)
  • English cricketer

    by Lumpy Stevens, only for the ball to pass through the two-stump wicket each time without hitting the stumps or the bail. As a result of Lumpy's protests

    John Small (cricketer)

    John_Small_(cricketer)

  • 1819 in the United Kingdom
  • 25 August – James Watt, Scottish inventor (born 1736) 7 September – Lumpy Stevens, cricketer (born 1735) 1 October – William Speechly, horticulturalist

    1819 in the United Kingdom

    1819_in_the_United_Kingdom

  • 1789 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    to 5 September. This was the final match in the career of the great Lumpy Stevens. Hampshire won by 15 runs. Six of Hambledon played against Six of Kent

    1789 English cricket season

    1789_English_cricket_season

  • The Cricketers of My Time
  • Cricket book by John Nyren

    18 November 1832 85–87 25 November 1832 96–98 2 December 1832 89–92 Lumpy Stevens 7 October 1832 65 14 October 1832 68–70 28 October 1832 79–81 25 November

    The Cricketers of My Time

    The_Cricketers_of_My_Time

  • 1783 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    to exceed £1000 a year", a colossal sum at the time. A portrait of Lumpy Stevens was probably painted this year. The famous portrait is at Knole House

    1783 English cricket season

    1783_English_cricket_season

  • 1819 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    historically important eleven-a-side matches are known. 7 September – death of Lumpy Stevens, arguably the greatest bowler of the 18th century According to James

    1819 English cricket season

    1819_English_cricket_season

  • Richard Nyren
  • English professional cricketer

    three times by Lumpy Stevens, only for the ball to go through the two-stump wicket without disturbing the bail. As a result of Lumpy's protests, the middle

    Richard Nyren

    Richard_Nyren

  • History of English cricket (1751–1775)
  • Development of cricket from 1751 to 1775

    of the greatest 18th-century players: Richard Nyren, John Small and Lumpy Stevens. Five eleven-a-side matches were recorded in 1765, including two in

    History of English cricket (1751–1775)

    History of English cricket (1751–1775)

    History_of_English_cricket_(1751–1775)

  • 1769 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    William Barber. The Caterham team was: Mr Henry Rowett, Bellchambers, Lumpy Stevens, Page, Joseph Miller, Smailes, John Wood, Will Palmer, Shepherd, Thomas

    1769 English cricket season

    1769_English_cricket_season

  • Alphabetical cricket teams
  • because Hambledon included four players from elsewhere and Kent two. Lumpy Stevens of Chertsey and Surrey was, as Haygarth says, a "given man" on the Hambledon/Hampshire

    Alphabetical cricket teams

    Alphabetical_cricket_teams

  • History of English cricket (1776–1800)
  • Development of cricket from 1776 to 1800

    of the period included batsmen John Small and Billy Beldham; bowlers Lumpy Stevens and David Harris; and the controversial all-rounder Lord Frederick Beauclerk

    History of English cricket (1776–1800)

    History_of_English_cricket_(1776–1800)

  • 1771 to 1775 in sports
  • voiced after a single wicket match at the Artillery Ground in which Lumpy Stevens beat John Small at least three times only for the ball to pass through

    1771 to 1775 in sports

    1771_to_1775_in_sports

  • 1776 in sports
  • into general use. England Most runs – John Small 423 Most wickets – Lumpy Stevens 27 Events The inaugural St Leger Stakes was run at Doncaster Racecourse

    1776 in sports

    1776_in_sports

  • Thomas Pattenden
  • English cricketer

    made a number of other good scores including 52 against the bowling of Lumpy Stevens and David Harris in 1783. He is believed to have been an innkeeper in

    Thomas Pattenden

    Thomas_Pattenden

  • Thomas Waymark
  • English cricketer (1705–?)

    and professional, became common in the 18th century. In later years, Lumpy Stevens and John Minshull were employed by their patrons as a gardener and a

    Thomas Waymark

    Thomas_Waymark

  • Larry Mondello
  • Fictional character

    Beaver, Stevens continued to get occasional roles in California-shot TV shows through 1963, before his career as a child actor came to a close. Stevens himself

    Larry Mondello

    Larry_Mondello

  • History of English amateur cricket
  • professional. Later in the 18th century, professionals like Edward "Lumpy" Stevens and John Minshull were employed by their patrons as gardeners or gamekeepers

    History of English amateur cricket

    History_of_English_amateur_cricket

  • East and West Kent cricket teams
  • Historical English cricket team

    with Harris, Stevens and Bedster versus East Kent". East Kent won this by 2 wickets. A curious condition of the match was that Lumpy Stevens, generally

    East and West Kent cricket teams

    East_and_West_Kent_cricket_teams

  • 1778 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    130. Hampshire replied with 152 and 76, so England won by 45 runs. Lumpy Stevens took seven wickets (bowled only) in the match for England. The England

    1778 English cricket season

    1778_English_cricket_season

  • Henry Crosoer
  • English cricketer (1765–unknown)

    been caught by Tom Taylor in the first innings, and then bowled by Lumpy Stevens in the second. Hampshire won this game by 35 runs. "Henry Crosoer".

    Henry Crosoer

    Henry_Crosoer

  • 1781 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    Tom Sueter had made two half-centuries in the match with 58 and 56. Lumpy Stevens took four wickets (bowled only) in each of the Mann's XI innings. A

    1781 English cricket season

    1781_English_cricket_season

  • 1766 to 1770 in sports
  • of two of the greatest bowlers of the 18th century, Thomas Brett and Lumpy Stevens.[citation needed] 1769 — John Minshull scored 107 in a minor match and

    1766 to 1770 in sports

    1766_to_1770_in_sports

  • List of tied first-class cricket matches
  • Bullen 2/? Windmill Down, Hambledon, Hampshire Umpires: unknown Kent 111 & 91 William Brazier 27 Lumpy Stevens 2/? James Aylward 27 Lumpy Stevens 2/?

    List of tied first-class cricket matches

    List_of_tied_first-class_cricket_matches

  • 1772 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    though he called it England; the team included nine Kent players with Lumpy Stevens and Thomas White from Surrey. A five-a-side match was played under single

    1772 English cricket season

    1772 English cricket season

    1772_English_cricket_season

  • List of Kent county cricketers to 1842
  • (1724–1731) William Stearman (1836–1840) Stephens (Dartford, 1751–1759) Lumpy Stevens (1774–1782) Stone (1751) Robert Stone (1790) Lord Strathavon (1827–1836)

    List of Kent county cricketers to 1842

    List_of_Kent_county_cricketers_to_1842

  • 1774 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    Hampshire and Kent at Moulsey Hurst for a stake of 100 guineas a side. Lumpy Stevens and Samuel Colchin played as given men for Hampshire and John Minshull

    1774 English cricket season

    1774_English_cricket_season

  • The New Leave It to Beaver
  • American television series

    (played by Osmond's two real-life sons Eric and Christian), as well as "Lumpy" Rutherford (Frank Bank) and his daughter J.J., with Diane Brewster returning

    The New Leave It to Beaver

    The_New_Leave_It_to_Beaver

  • Pendleton Ward
  • American animator (born 1982)

    Adventure Time: Distant Lands Lumpy Space Princess / Additional voices 3 episodes 2023 Adventure Time: Fionna and Cake Ellis P. / Lumpy Space Princess / Additional

    Pendleton Ward

    Pendleton Ward

    Pendleton_Ward

  • 1744 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    not mentioned in other sources. They have no known connection with Lumpy Stevens. Tom Faulkner Addington and Surrey A prominent single wicket player

    1744 English cricket season

    1744 English cricket season

    1744_English_cricket_season

  • Stephen Butcher (cricketer)
  • English cricketer (c.1765–?)

    with Lumpy Stevens. In the Hornchurch first innings, he held one catch to dismiss John Boorman for 12, and bowled Michael Remington for 2. Lumpy took

    Stephen Butcher (cricketer)

    Stephen_Butcher_(cricketer)

  • History of English cricket (1726–1750)
  • Cricket Club, famous in the second half of the century for the players Lumpy Stevens and William Yalden, was first recorded in 1736, when the team played

    History of English cricket (1726–1750)

    History of English cricket (1726–1750)

    History_of_English_cricket_(1726–1750)

  • Will Palmer (cricketer)
  • English cricketer (1736–1790)

    and 5. In the second innings, he was bowled by his Surrey colleague, Lumpy Stevens, who was playing for Hampshire as a given man. After that poor start

    Will Palmer (cricketer)

    Will_Palmer_(cricketer)

  • Itchin Stoke Down
  • Cricket ground near Alresford, Hampshire

    July 1778. England won by 45 runs, thanks largely to the bowling of Lumpy Stevens. The Down was used as an occasional venue by Hampshire teams from then

    Itchin Stoke Down

    Itchin_Stoke_Down

  • Caterham Cricket Club
  • Historical English cricket team

    known Surrey players were members of the Caterham teams, including Lumpy Stevens, Will Palmer, Thomas Quiddington, and John Wood. There is a modern Caterham

    Caterham Cricket Club

    Caterham_Cricket_Club

  • 1776 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    other accounts, Kent was called "England", but it was in fact Kent with Lumpy Stevens and Thomas White of Surrey as given men. The teams met again on Broadhalfpenny

    1776 English cricket season

    1776_English_cricket_season

  • 1788 English cricket season
  • Cricket season review

    9–10 June at Moulsey Hurst. Surrey won by 9 wickets. Surrey bowlers Lumpy Stevens and Stephen Butcher dismissed Hampshire for 59 and 63. Played 13 June

    1788 English cricket season

    1788_English_cricket_season

  • Walk of Shame (film)
  • 2014 film by Steven Brill

    that doesn't push for either gallows humor or wacky comedy, calling it "a lumpy and laughless farce". Elizabeth Weitzman of the New York Daily News commended

    Walk of Shame (film)

    Walk_of_Shame_(film)

  • Iceman (album)
  • 2026 studio album by Drake

    set it back down", and concluded the album is "a long platter of cold, lumpy self-pity". In a mixed review of the three-album release, Roisin O'Connor

    Iceman (album)

    Iceman_(album)

  • List of films with post-credits scenes
  • music. Pooh's Heffalump Movie During the first half of the end credits Lumpy does fun activities with Winnie the Pooh and the others and meets Christopher

    List of films with post-credits scenes

    List_of_films_with_post-credits_scenes

  • Jaws (film)
  • 1975 film by Steven Spielberg

    depends on excess for its impact. Ashore it is a bore, awkwardly staged and lumpily written." Marcia Magill of Films in Review said that while Jaws "is eminently

    Jaws (film)

    Jaws (film)

    Jaws_(film)

  • Family Scrapbook
  • 39th episode of the 6th season of Leave It to Beaver

    to Beaver. TV Books, 1984, 1998. (ISBN 1575000520). Bank, Frank. Call Me Lumpy: my Leave It To Beaver days and other wild Hollywood life . Addax, 2002

    Family Scrapbook

    Family_Scrapbook

  • Munich (2005 film)
  • 2005 historical film directed by Steven Spielberg

    plotting and a "flabby script." McCarthy says that the film turns into "... a lumpy and overlong morality play on a failed thriller template." To succeed, McCarthy

    Munich (2005 film)

    Munich_(2005_film)

  • Mark Williams (actor)
  • English actor, comedian, presenter and screenwriter

    "Stasis Leak" Alexei Sayle's Stuff First series, six episodes Tumbledown Lumpy 1990 Making Out Manfred Episodes 1 and 2 KYTV Episode: "Launch" 1991 Merlin

    Mark Williams (actor)

    Mark Williams (actor)

    Mark_Williams_(actor)

  • Steve Hytner
  • American actor

    Luck Charlie Marvin Starkwell Episode: "Snow Show" About Fifty Larry of Lumpy's 2012 Should've Been Romeo Rick 2016 Bad Vegan and the Teleportation Machine

    Steve Hytner

    Steve Hytner

    Steve_Hytner

  • Jennifer Garner
  • American actress (born 1972)

    wrote that she "realizes Elektra more through movement than by way of her lumpy, obvious lines. She hasn't mastered the combat skill of tossing off bad

    Jennifer Garner

    Jennifer Garner

    Jennifer_Garner

  • Bob Keeshan
  • American children's television personality and host (1927–2004)

    included his sidekick (and fan favorite) Mr. Green Jeans (played by Hugh "Lumpy" Brannum), Dennis (played by Cosmo Allegretti), and puppets such as Bunny

    Bob Keeshan

    Bob Keeshan

    Bob_Keeshan

  • Andy Serkis filmography
  • Blessed Father Carlo 13 Going on 30 Richard Kneeland 2005 King Kong Kong / Lumpy Motion capture of Kong 2006 Stormbreaker Mr. Grin The Prestige Mr. Alley

    Andy Serkis filmography

    Andy Serkis filmography

    Andy_Serkis_filmography

  • Vaginal wet mount
  • Gynecologic test

    diagnosed by wet mount: A vaginal yeast infection often causes a white, lumpy discharge that looks like cottage cheese. diagnosis is made if pseudohyphae

    Vaginal wet mount

    Vaginal wet mount

    Vaginal_wet_mount

  • Spherical Earth
  • Approximation of the figure of Earth as a sphere

    equator than a perfect sphere would be. Earth's shape is also slightly lumpy because it is composed of different materials of different densities that

    Spherical Earth

    Spherical Earth

    Spherical_Earth

  • Leave It to Beaver season 5
  • Season of television series

    was for Lumpy. Not knowing it was his son that wanted to join the Merchant Marine, Fred Rutherford comes to an understanding with Lumpy; and Lumpy decides

    Leave It to Beaver season 5

    Leave_It_to_Beaver_season_5

  • Bruce Hampton
  • American musician (1947–2017)

    1967 – We're Only In It For The Money – Frank Zappa (Verve Records) 1968 – Lumpy Gravy – Frank Zappa (briefly released under Capitol Records) 1979 – Skin

    Bruce Hampton

    Bruce Hampton

    Bruce_Hampton

  • Mini Electric
  • All-electric hatchback

    fidgets and fusses more than we'd like; ... [the steering] tugs about lumpily under heavy acceleration and there's a surprising dead spot on the straight

    Mini Electric

    Mini Electric

    Mini_Electric

  • Leave It to Beaver season 3
  • Season of television series

    Wally study in Ward's den. Eddie and Lumpy come over; Eddie introduces Lumpy to June and informs her that Lumpy was left back in their class this year

    Leave It to Beaver season 3

    Leave_It_to_Beaver_season_3

  • The Ozark Mountain Daredevils
  • American rock band

    Chapman; he was briefly succeeded on drums by the band's sound man, Rick "Lumpy" Davidson, who previously had sometimes joined the group onstage playing

    The Ozark Mountain Daredevils

    The Ozark Mountain Daredevils

    The_Ozark_Mountain_Daredevils

  • Adventure Time season 5
  • Season of television series

    the show: Princess Bubblegum, The Ice King, Marceline the Vampire Queen, Lumpy Space Princess, BMO, and Flame Princess. This season comprises 52 episodes

    Adventure Time season 5

    Adventure_Time_season_5

  • The Devil and Max Devlin
  • 1981 film by Steven Hilliard Stern

    Gary Arnold of The Washington Post wrote, "It's no fun at all watching a lumpy, glum Elliott Gould going through the motions of preying on a group of children

    The Devil and Max Devlin

    The_Devil_and_Max_Devlin

  • Leave It to Beaver season 2
  • Season of television series

    Fred has Lumpy apologize to the Cleavers. Guests: Richard Deacon as Fred Rutherford, Rusty Stevens as Larry Mondello, Frank Bank as Lumpy Rutherford

    Leave It to Beaver season 2

    Leave_It_to_Beaver_season_2

  • Tumbledown
  • 1988 British television film

    Hildebrand as Prothero Tam Dean Burn as Sergeant Brodick Mark Williams as Lumpy Ian Michie as Fraser Paul Higgins as Saltemarsh Stewart Porter as O'Rourke

    Tumbledown

    Tumbledown

  • Tomato
  • Edible berry

    being cultivated in southern Mexico and probably other areas. A large, lumpy variety of tomato, a mutation from a smoother, smaller fruit, originated

    Tomato

    Tomato

    Tomato

  • Adventure Time season 6
  • Season of television series

    the show: Princess Bubblegum, The Ice King, Marceline the Vampire Queen, Lumpy Space Princess, BMO, and Flame Princess. The season also featured Masaakk

    Adventure Time season 6

    Adventure_Time_season_6

  • Demand forecasting
  • Estimations of customer demand

    Another metric to consider, especially when there are intermittent or lumpy demand patterns at hand, is SPEC (Stock-keeping-oriented Prediction Error

    Demand forecasting

    Demand_forecasting

  • Deliverance
  • 1972 film by John Boorman

    negative, calling the film "a disappointment" because "so many of Dickey's lumpy narrative ideas remain in his screenplay that John Boorman's screen version

    Deliverance

    Deliverance

  • Leave It to Beaver season 4
  • Season of television series

    problems seldom last more than a day. Guests: Rusty Stevens as Larry Mondello, Frank Bank as Lumpy Rutherford, Stanley Fafara as Whitey Whitney, Stephen

    Leave It to Beaver season 4

    Leave_It_to_Beaver_season_4

  • Sunday in the Park with George
  • 1984 musical by Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine

    lopsided piece—pairing a near-perfect, self-contained first act with a lumpier, less assured second half—this production goes further than any I’ve seen

    Sunday in the Park with George

    Sunday_in_the_Park_with_George

  • Leave It to Beaver season 6
  • Season of television series

    and Roland MacLane. All four cast members appear in every episode. Rusty Stevens, who played Larry Mondello in the first four seasons, returns in flashbacks

    Leave It to Beaver season 6

    Leave_It_to_Beaver_season_6

  • Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies
  • US Department of Defense outreach center

    "ANNUAL REPORT 2015" (PDF). Apcss.org. Retrieved 27 October 2017. Lumbaca, Lumpy. "The Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies. What's

    Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies

    Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies

    Asia-Pacific_Center_for_Security_Studies

  • Frank Zappa
  • American musician (1940–1993)

    material for an album of orchestral works to be released under his own name, Lumpy Gravy, to be released by Capitol Records in 1967. Due to contractual problems

    Frank Zappa

    Frank Zappa

    Frank_Zappa

  • Tales of an Ancient Empire
  • 2010 American film

    Sorcerer didn't exactly have the sturdiest of scripts, which resulted in a lumpy middle section, but it was all of a piece, a consistent vision—for my money

    Tales of an Ancient Empire

    Tales_of_an_Ancient_Empire

  • List of Courage the Cowardly Dog episodes
  • 1 and 13, which were written by John R. Dilworth) were written by David Steven Cohen. Note 2: According to copyright dates, episodes 1 to 9 of this season

    List of Courage the Cowardly Dog episodes

    List of Courage the Cowardly Dog episodes

    List_of_Courage_the_Cowardly_Dog_episodes

  • List of Max & Ruby episodes
  • directed by Jamie Whitney. While all episodes of Season 2 were directed by Steven Boeckler, fourteen of them (1b through 2a, 3a, 3b, 4c, 5b through 6a, 7a

    List of Max & Ruby episodes

    List_of_Max_&_Ruby_episodes

AI & ChatGPT searchs for online references containing LUMPY STEVENS

LUMPY STEVENS

AI search references containing LUMPY STEVENS

LUMPY STEVENS

  • Zola | زولاہ
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Zola | زولاہ

    Lump of earth

    Zola | زولاہ

  • MELLAN
  • Male

    Irish

    MELLAN

    Variant spelling of Irish Meallán, MELLAN means "little lump."

    MELLAN

  • Zola
  • Boy/Male

    Indian

    Zola

    Lump of earth

    Zola

  • Butner
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Butner

    English : occupational name for a maker or seller of buttons, Old French boutonier, from bo(u)ton ‘knob’, ‘lump’, specialized to mean ‘button’.Altered spelling of German Büttner (see Buettner).

    Butner

  • Keech
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Keech

    English : from Middle English keech ‘lump’, ‘fat’, hence an unflattering nickname for a fat, lumpish person.

    Keech

  • Maser
  • Surname or Lastname

    German

    Maser

    German : nickname for someone with boils or lumpy skin, or perhaps for a hunchback, from Middle High German maser ‘lump’, ‘protuberance’.German and English : from Middle High Germanmaser, Middle English maser ‘maple-wood bowl’ (Old French masere, of Germanic origin), hence a metonymic occupational name for a wood-turner producing such ware.English : variant spelling of Macer, an occupational name for a mace-bearer, from Old French maissier, massier, a derivative of Old French masse ‘mace’.German (Maaser) : pet form of Thomas.

    Maser

  • Bunyan
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Bedfordshire)

    Bunyan

    English (Bedfordshire) : nickname for someone disfigured by a lump or hump, from a diminutive of Old French bugne ‘swelling’, ‘protuberance’. The term bugnon was also applied to a kind of puffed-up fruit tart, and so the surname may also have been a metonymic occupational name for a baker of these.

    Bunyan

  • Clack
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Clack

    English : from a Middle English personal name Clac, which is from Old English Clacc or the Old Norse cognate Klakkr. As a personal name this is from a word meaning ‘lump’ and may have been used as a nickname for a large or thickset man. Reaney suggests that it could also be from clacker ‘chatterer’.

    Clack

  • Clinch
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Clinch

    English : habitational name from a place in Wiltshire named Clench, from Old English clenc ‘lump’, ‘hill’, which seems also to have been used of a patch of dry raised ground in fenland surroundings. In some cases the surname may be of topographic origin.English : metonymic occupational name for a maker or fixer of bolts and rivets, from Middle English clinch, clench ‘door nail secured by riveting or clinching’, from clench(en) ‘to fix firmly’.

    Clinch

  • Cobb
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (mainly Dorset; also East Anglia)

    Cobb

    English (mainly Dorset; also East Anglia) : from the Middle English byname or personal name Cobbe, Cobba, or its Old Norse cognate Kobbi, which are probably from an element meaning ‘lump’, used to denote a large man.English (mainly Dorset; also East Anglia) : from a reduced form of Jacob.

    Cobb

  • Shroll
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Shroll

    English : unexplained; possibly an Anglicized form of the German name Schroll, a nickname for a coarse person, from Middle High German schrolle ‘lump’, ‘clod’

    Shroll

  • Button
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Button

    English : metonymic occupational name for a maker or seller of buttons, from Old French bo(u)ton ‘knob’, ‘lump’, specialized to mean ‘button’. Compare Butner.

    Button

  • Boss
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Boss

    English : nickname for a hunchback, from Old French bossu ‘hunchbacked’ (a derivative of bosse ‘lump’, ‘hump’; compare Bossard 2).German : from a short form of the personal name Borkhardt, a variant of Burkhart.Possibly an altered spelling of South German Bös (see Bos).Danish : medieval variant of Buus, a surname of uncertain origin, perhaps from German būsemen ‘devil’, ‘ghost’.

    Boss

  • Bunney
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Devon)

    Bunney

    English (Devon) : possibly a nickname, as Reaney suggests, for someone having a prominent lump or swelling, from Middle English boni, buny ‘swelling’, ‘bunion’ (see Bunyan). It is also possibly a topographic name from the southwestern English dialect word bunny ‘ravine’.

    Bunney

  • Crute
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Crute

    English : nickname for a dullard, from Middle English crot, crote ‘lump’, ‘clod’.

    Crute

  • Cade
  • Boy/Male

    American, Australian, British, Chinese, Christian, English, French

    Cade

    Round; Lumpy; Gentle; Barrel-maker

    Cade

  • Zola
  • Girl/Female

    American, Australian, Jamaican

    Zola

    Productive; Quietness; Earth; Lump of Earth

    Zola

  • Clapham
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Clapham

    English : habitational name from any of various places called Clapham, for example in Bedfordshire, Surrey, Sussex, and North Yorkshire. The first three are named with Old English clopp(a) ‘lump’, ‘hillock’ + hām ‘homestead’ or hamm ‘enclosure hemmed in by water’, while the Yorkshire place name is formed with an Old English word clæpe ‘noisy stream’.

    Clapham

  • Zola
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic, Hindu, Indian, Italian, Muslim

    Zola

    Moon; Lump of Earth

    Zola

  • Clapp
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (chiefly Bristol)

    Clapp

    English (chiefly Bristol) : from Middle English clop(pe) ‘lump’, ‘hillock’ (from Old English clopp(a)), applied either as a topographic name or as a nickname for a large and ungainly person.Variant spelling of German Klapp.

    Clapp

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LUMPY STEVENS

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LUMPY STEVENS

Online names & meanings

  • AZAZEL
  • Male

    English

    AZAZEL

    Anglicized form of Hebrew Aza'zel, AZAZEL means "entire removal" and "scapegoat." In the bible, this word is found in the law of the day of atonement (Leviticus 16:8, 10, 26). It refers to a goat used for sacrifice for the sins of the people. In modern times, Azazel was interpreted as a Satanic, goat-like demon. The name has even been used for the "Angel of Death."

  • ESTEFANÍA
  • Female

    Spanish

    ESTEFANÍA

    Feminine form of Spanish Estéban, ESTEFANÍA means "crown."

  • Rehmat
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Sikh

    Rehmat

    Blessing

  • Deborah
  • Girl/Female

    Hebrew American Biblical

    Deborah

    Bee. Deborah was the Biblical prophetess who summoned Barak to battle against an army of...

  • Priyanka
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu

    Priyanka

    Beautiful, Lovable act, Symbol, Body

  • Zaahid
  • Boy/Male

    Afghan, Arabic, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Muslim

    Zaahid

    Ascetic; Abstemious; Devotee

  • Neelangini
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu, Indian

    Neelangini

    Wife of Lord Shiva

  • ADRIENN
  • Female

    Hungarian

    ADRIENN

    Hungarian feminine form of Latin Adrianus, ADRIENN means "from Hadria."

  • Sadducees
  • Biblical

    Sadducees

    followers of Sadoc, or Zadok

  • ah Toy
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Scandinavian

    ah Toy

    Toy

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LUMPY STEVENS

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LUMPY STEVENS

AI searchs for Acronyms & meanings containing LUMPY STEVENS

LUMPY STEVENS

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Other words and meanings similar to

LUMPY STEVENS

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing LUMPY STEVENS

LUMPY STEVENS

  • Glebe
  • n.

    A lump; a clod.

  • Clotter
  • v. i.

    To concrete into lumps; to clot.

  • Flocculate
  • v. i.

    To aggregate into small lumps.

  • Noduled
  • a.

    Having little knots or lumps.

  • Dumpy
  • superl.

    Short and thick; of low stature and disproportionately stout.

  • Luncheon
  • n.

    A lump of food.

  • Slumpy
  • a.

    Easily broken through; boggy; marshy; swampy.

  • Glumpy
  • a.

    Glum; sullen; sulky.

  • Dumpy
  • superl.

    Sullen or discontented.

  • Clumpy
  • n.

    Composed of clumps; massive; shapeless.

  • Lump
  • v. i.

    To get along with as one can, although displeased; as, if he does n't like it, he can lump it.

  • Lumped
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Lump

  • Lumper
  • n.

    One who lumps.

  • Squatty
  • a.

    Squat; dumpy.

  • Lumpy
  • superl.

    Full of lumps, or small compact masses.

  • Dumpiness
  • n.

    The state of being dumpy.

  • Lumping
  • p. pr. & vb. n.

    of Lump

  • Humpy
  • a.

    Full of humps or bunches; covered with protuberances; humped.

  • Lump
  • n.

    A small mass of matter of irregular shape; an irregular or shapeless mass; as, a lump of coal; a lump of iron ore.

  • Plumpy
  • a.

    Plump; fat; sleek.