cram 的 3 个定义
crammed, cram·ming.
- to fill by force with more than it can easily hold.
- to force or stuff.
- to fill with or as with an excessive amount of food; overfeed.
- (5)
crammed, cram·ming.
- to eat greedily or to excess.
- to study for an examination by memorizing facts at the last minute.
- to press or force accommodation in a room, vehicle, etc., beyond normal or comfortable capacity; crowd; jam: The whole team crammed into the bus.
- Informal. the act of cramming for an examination.
- a crammed state.
- a dense crowd; throng.
cram 近义词
fill to overflowing; compress
study intensely
cram 的近义词 8 个
cram 的反义词 3 个
更多cram例句
- Collins said that most of her knowledge is from “here and there,” so there was no need to cram before the tournament.
- Families of four and five cram into one-room shares without running water or reliable electricity.
- Workers cram into company-owned dorms known as “man camps” or in trailers or tents.
- If you cram that many scantily-clad people onto a beach in hot weather, things are likely to get ugly at some point.
- Trying to cram that down into 250 words is fun and challenging.
- This is simpler than having to cram and then stand the racket of a competitive examination.
- Still he clung to the little thistledown of hope that he should have plenty of time to cram it before the form were called up.
- They cram as much fruit as they possibly can into their cheek pouches to take away and eat afterwards at their leisure.
- It would indeed be unreasonable to cram into a single genus both superior and inferior things.
- And the speaker subsided into thoughtful silence, and began slowly to cram his pipe.