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5 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
cram
/ˈkræm/
(vt.)塞滿,填滿,猛吃(vi.)貪吃塞滿
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Cram
,
v. i.
1.
To
eat
greedily
,
and
to
satiety
;
to
stuff
.
Gluttony
. . . .
Crams
,
and
blasphemes
his
feeder
. --
Milton
.
2.
To
make
crude
preparation
for
a
special
occasion
,
as
an
examination
,
by
a
hasty
and
extensive
course
of
memorizing
or
study
. [
Colloq
.]
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Cram
,
n.
1.
The
act
of
cramming
.
2.
Information
hastily
memorized
;
as
,
a
cram
from
an
examination
. [
Colloq
.]
3.
Weaving
A
warp
having
more
than
two
threads
passing
through
each
dent
or
split
of
the
reed
.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Cram
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Crammed
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Cramming
.]
1.
To
press
,
force
,
or
drive
,
particularly
in
filling
,
or
in
thrusting
one
thing
into
another
;
to
stuff
;
to
crowd
;
to
fill
to
superfluity
;
as
,
to
cram
anything
into
a
basket
;
to
cram
a
room
with
people
.
Their
storehouses
crammed
with
grain
.
--
Shak
.
He
will
cram
his
brass
down
our
throats
.
--
Swift
.
2.
To
fill
with
food
to
satiety
;
to
stuff
.
Children
would
be
freer
from
disease
if
they
were
not
crammed
so
much
as
they
are
by
fond
mothers
.
--
Locke
.
Cram
us
with
praise
,
and
make
us
As
fat
as
tame
things
. --
Shak
.
3.
To
put
hastily
through
an
extensive
course
of
memorizing
or
study
,
as
in
preparation
for
an
examination
;
as
,
a
pupil
is
crammed
by
his
tutor
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
cram
v
1:
crowd
or
pack
to
capacity
; "
the
theater
was
jampacked
" [
syn
:
jam
,
jampack
,
ram
,
chock up
,
wad
]
2:
put
something
somewhere
so
that
the
space
is
completely
filled
; "
cram
books
into
the
suitcase
"
3:
study
intensively
,
as
before
an
exam
; "
I
had
to
bone
up
on
my
Latin
verbs
before
the
final
exam
" [
syn
:
grind away
,
drum
,
bone up
,
swot
,
get up
,
mug up
,
swot up
,
bone
]
4:
prepare
(
students
)
hastily
for
an
impending
exam
[
also
:
cramming
,
crammed
]
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