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cram

Pronunciation: /kram/
Translate cram | into French | into German | into Italian | into Spanish
Definition of cram

verb (crams, cramming, crammed)

  • 1 [with object] completely fill (a place or container) to the point of overflowing:the ashtray by the bed was crammed with cigarette butts
  • force (people or things) into a place or container that is or appears to be too small to contain them:it’s amazing how you’ve managed to cram everyone in figurativehe had crammed so much into his short life
  • [no object] (of a number of people) enter a place that is too small to accommodate all of them:they all crammed into the car
  • 2 [no object] study intensively over a short period of time just before an examination:lectures were called off so students could cram for the semester finals

Origin:

Old English crammian, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch krammen 'to cramp or clamp'

cram in other Oxford dictionaries

Definition of cram in the US English dictionary
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