top one's boom

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Originally referring to maximizing the sail on a ship.

Verb[edit]

top one's boom (third-person singular simple present tops one's boom, present participle topping one's boom, simple past and past participle topped one's boom)

  1. To depart quickly.
    • 1862, Chartley Castle, Harold Overdon, ashore and afloat, page 98:
      Her husband had topped his boom, and so had his Lordship.
    • 1880, Nauticus, Nauticus on his hobby horse, or the adventures of a sailor during a tricycle cruise of 1427 miles:
      With my usual luck I found that the castle would not be open until three o'clock, as it was now noon I did not care to wait all that time, so "topping my boom" we went on to Tonbridge Wells by a hilly road.
    • 2007, William Stamer, Recollections of a Life of Adventure - Volume 1, →ISBN, page 128:
      So, buoyant with the hope of being able to make up for my increased expenditure by happy speculations in the share market, I at once topped my boom, and without a single misgiving for the future got quickly under way.