doolally tap
English
Alternative forms
- doolally-tap
Etymology
From Deolali (the name of a former British army camp 100 miles north-east of Bombay, used as a transit station for soldiers awaiting transport back to Britain) + tap (from Persian or Urdu تب (tab, “malarial fever”), ultimately from Sanskrit ताप (tāpa, “heat; fever”)).
According to one theory, to go doolally tap was to go crazy waiting.
Noun
- Camp fever; by extension, madness, eccentricity.
- 1971, Brian Aldiss, A Soldier Erect:
- Mrrhhhh, nothing wrong with me, sergeant, it's just the old Doolally Tap.
- 1994, Maurice Hayes, Seamus Heaney, Sweet Killough: Let Go Your Anchor:
- 'The Doolally tap,' my father would say, mysteriously, and McAllister would agree.
- 2008, Amitav Ghosh, Sea of Poppies:
- It would probably give Mrs Doughty an attack of the Doolally-tap.
- 2009, Annie Murray, A Hopscotch Summer:
- 'He's got the doolally-taps,' she'd heard Bob say when they mentioned him, and he usually rolled his eyes and tapped his temple when he said it even though he didn't speak unkindly.
Adjective
doolally tap (comparative more doolally tap, superlative most doolally tap)
- (UK) Mad, insane, eccentric.
- 2007, Martina Cole, Faces, unnumbered page:
- If he had not paid her phone bills she would have gone doolally tap, as her mother used to say, without a friendly voice now and then.
Derived terms
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.