Bum

Bum or bums may refer to:

Slang

  • Buttocks
  • A lazy person
  • A homeless person
  • Places

  • Bum, Afghanistan, several locales
  • Bum, Azerbaijan, a village
  • Bum Chiefdom, Bonthe District, Sierra Leone
  • People

    Nickname

  • Bum Bright (1920–2004), American businessman
  • Lee McClung (1870–1914), football player and 22nd Treasurer of the United States
  • Bum Phillips (1923–2013), American football coach
  • Given name

  • Kim Bum (born 1989), South Korean actor
  • Surname

  • Khem Bahadur Bum, Nepalese politician elected in 2008
  • Narendra Bahadur Bum, Nepalese politician elected in 1999
  • Other

  • Bums, nickname for Brooklyn Dodgers baseball team
  • B.U.M. Equipment, US clothing brand
  • Bum, an album by Italian band I Vincisgrassi
  • Bum language, spoken in Cameroon
  • ISO 639 code for the Bulu language, in Cameroon
  • Breguet Bre.4 or BUM, French World War I bomber
  • See also

  • Bum Bum Island, Malaysia
  • "Bum Bum", a song by Italian singer Gigi D'Alessio
  • All pages beginning with "Bum"
  • All pages with titles containing Bum
  • Bumb (disambiguation)
  • Bum Chiefdom

    Bum is a chiefdom in Bonthe District of Sierra Leone. As of 2004 it had a population of 18,827.

    References


    Nyangatom people

    The Nyangatom also known as Donyiro and pejoratively as Bumé are Nilotic agro-pastoralists inhabiting the border of southwestern Ethiopia and southeastern South Sudan and in the Ilemi Triangle with populations residing in both countries.

    Overview

    The Nyangatom are members of the Ateker or Karamojong cluster that also contains the Turkana, Toposa, Karamojong, and Jie who speak closely related languages. They number approximately 30,000 with populations in both South Sudan and Ethiopia. Many Nyangatom are nomadic, residing in mobile livestock villages that may migrate several times a year. A substantial number of Nyangatom also reside in semi-permanent villages. It is common for individuals to move between mobile cattle camps and semi-permanent villages.

    The Nyangatom have intermittent conflict with many of their neighbors, especially the Turkana, Dassanetch, and Suri. The Kenyan government provides some military support to the Turkana in these conflicts. Despite the risk of intergroup conflict, many Nyangatom have bond friends with members of other groups and there are trade relationships between the Nyangatom and many of their neighbors.

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