crimp
verb /krɪmp/
  /krɪmp/
 Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they crimp |  /krɪmp/  /krɪmp/ | 
| he / she / it crimps |  /krɪmps/  /krɪmps/ | 
| past simple crimped |  /krɪmpt/  /krɪmpt/ | 
| past participle crimped |  /krɪmpt/  /krɪmpt/ | 
| -ing form crimping |  /ˈkrɪmpɪŋ/  /ˈkrɪmpɪŋ/ | 
- crimp something to make curls in somebody’s hair by pressing it with a heated tool- crimped blonde hair
 
- crimp something to press cloth, paper, etc. into small folds- She crimped the edge of the pie.
 
- crimp something (North American English, informal) to limit the growth or development of something- Shrinking state revenues have crimped security budgets.
 
Word OriginOld English gecrympan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch krimpen ‘shrink, wrinkle’. Rare before the 18th cent., the word was perhaps reintroduced from Low German or Dutch.