Use of the contrived verb "whelm"

In a magazine article on the care of kittens, it said not to show a new kitten too much of your home at first ‘so it won’t be overwhelmed.’
I wanted to picture a cute little kitten with a sign around its neck reading “WHELMED.” :slight_smile:
To what uses can this contrived verb be put?

You don’t want it to whelmed either

I’ve heard of underwhelmed being used to mean not impressed at all.

Etymology sites will give as an example of overwhelmed: a bowl being placed over a plate of food to keep flies and other vermin away, and a bowl being clapped down over a mouse, which is then in great danger. But the first sense of the word has been overwhelmed by the second.

As always when it comes to the etymology of obscure words I turn to World Wide Words.

Science Fiction writer Jack Vance even used it as a noun, in one of his “Alastor Cluster” novels. The space emperor’s (“The Connatic’s”) battle fleet was called “The Whelm.”