Citations:jamber

verb

 * 2000, Kimberley Comeaux, Susan K. Downs, Cathy Marie Hake, Kathleen Paul, The Heart of a Child, Barbour Pub Incorporated (ISBN 9781577486466)
 * and I like that &#39; cause the train jiggles and jostles and jambers your nerves.

noun

 * (chiefly in the plural) Bases (armor skirts) or one of the pieces that comprise them. Lamboys.


 * 1905, Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne, Proceedings, page 241:
 * This is a tonlet armour (a tonne), that is with a deep skirt of hoops, called jambers or bases. These jambers are usually called lamboys, but this, Viscount Dillon informs me, is an old misreading. The hoops move upwards and ...
 * mentiony:


 * 2013, R. Coltman Clephan, The Medieval Tournament, Courier Corporation (ISBN 9780486148045)
 * Tonlet armour (à tonne) has a deep skirt of hoops called “jambers,” standing out all round like a more modern crinoline, and moving up and down like the laths of a Venetian blind. It also had its origin in Italy, and was copied from the ...