1. Either of two species of agile goat antelopes (Rupicapra rupicapra or R. pyrenaica) of mountainous regions of Europe and western Asia, having upright horns with backward-hooked tips.
2. (shăm′ē) also cham·my or sham·mypl.cham·mies
a. A soft leather made from the hide of these antelopes or of other animals such as deer or sheep.
b. A piece of such leather or of a fabric or material made to resemble it, used as a polishing or drying cloth or in shirts.
3. (shăm′wä′, shăm′wä′, shăm′ē) A moderate to grayish yellow.
[French, from Middle French, from Old French, from Late Latin camōx, of pre-Roman Alpine origin and perhaps ultimately from Celtic *kambo-, crooked (in reference to the hooked horns of the chamois; compare Old Irish and Middle Welsh camm, crooked).]
Peslier's four wins of the day came courtesy Tahirwah for Shaikh Hamdan and Al Chammy, Joudh and Nafees for the Royal Cavalry of Oman, who have become a powerhouse stable for Arabians.
It's about as dexterous as driving through an automated car wash, rather than spending a Sunday morning polishing away with (oh, the excitement of it) a new chammy leather.
Dr Geoffrey Scott Carroll, the Scots-born business man in charge of this 'shoogle your chammy and waggle your wallies' event, has admitted that when it was launched two years ago it was only ever meant to be 'a one-off p**s-up'.
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