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blam

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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See also: BLAM, blăm, and błam

English

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

By onomatopoeia.

Noun

blam (plural blams)

  1. A sudden, explosive sound, such as is made by a gunshot.
    He kicked in the door with a blam.

Interjection

blam

  1. A sudden, explosive sound, such as is made by a gunshot.
    That the last zombie? Here. Let me get that for ya. *BLAM!*

Verb

blam (third-person singular simple present blams, present participle blamming, simple past and past participle blammed) (MLE, African-American Vernacular, slang)

  1. (intransitive) To fire a gun.
  2. (transitive) To shoot; to kill by gunshot.
  3. (transitive) To shoot, to propel by means of sudden impact.
    • 2022, “REALIFE”, LF70 (lyrics), 1:29:
      Spin that whip, let me see that dog, Imma blam that goal like Messi, shit gets messy – and I still get him down with my lefty

Verb

blam (third-person singular simple present blams, present participle blamming, simple past and past participle blammed) (Internet slang, Newgrounds)

  1. When a user-submitted movie/game gets unpublished (removed from the Portal), due to having a rating below 2 stars.
    My game got blammed.
  2. To rate a user-submitted movie/game below 2 stars.
    That animation was a test animation, so I blammed it.

Derived terms

Etymology 2

Blend of blog + spam.

Noun

blam (uncountable)

  1. (Internet, informal) Spam posted to a blog.
    • 2012, Martin Peitz, Joel Waldfogel, The Oxford Handbook of the Digital Economy:
      [] we refer to unsolicited and unwanted advertising as spam. The phenomenon is widespread, and has led people to coin terms for it in other information product or service contexts, such as splog or blam (unsolicited advertisements in blog comments), spim (instant messaging), []
    • 2014, Nicolae Sfetcu, Internet Marketing, SEO & Advertising:
      To counter this effect, spammers attempt to create links to their sites on other people's pages. The most common targets for this kind of spam are weblogs, the spamming then being known as blog spam, or "blam" for short.

Anagrams

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Middle English

Noun

blam

  1. (rare) alternative form of blame

Romanian

Etymology

Borrowed from French blâme.

Noun

blam n (plural blamuri)

  1. public disapproval, condemnation

Declension

More information singular, plural ...

Serbo-Croatian

Etymology

Back-formation from blamírati.

Noun

blȃm m inan (Cyrillic spelling бла̑м)

  1. (Serbia, colloquial) (feeling of) embarrassment

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