Brian Snyder / Reuters Maybe the 2016 election will bring some kind of meaning to the currently nonexistent word "trumpence."

CLEVELAND ― During the Republican National Convention last week, Google searches increased for phrases containing the word “trumpence,” including, “what does trumpence mean?” But “trumpence” doesn’t mean anything, because it’s not actually a word. It sounds a lot like “tuppence” or “two pence” ― a form of British money that might be recognizable to some thanks to a song in the film “Mary Poppins” ― but it’s nothing more than a combination of the last names of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and his running mate, Mike Pence. Merriam-Webster doesn’t define “trumpence,” but a spokesman for the dictionary publisher noted that there’s been an increase in the number of people turning to its website to search for the word “trumpery” throughout Trump’s presidential campaign. There was one particularly curious thing that people asked Google about during convention week: “Is Trumpence in the Bible?”

It’s highly unlikely that it is, according to Greg Carey, an author and professor of the New Testament at Lancaster Theological Seminary. “Neither ‘Trumpence’ nor ‘Trumppence’ is in any English edition of the Bible I could search,” Carey wrote in an email to The Huffington Post. “Moreover, since the Bible was written in Greek and Hebrew, that makes the occurrence of such a term near-impossible.” It’s possible people might be wondering if the Bible prophesies Trump, Carey said, noting that “Bible prophecy speculation runs rampant in our country.”