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The spelling is jam (same as a traffic jam or a jar of jam), meaning a tight spot.The homophone (sound-alike word) is jamb, part of a door frame.
The word for a primarily Creole rice dish is jambalaya.
The British word "jam" can mean a couple of things. If you mean the food, a sweet paste of fruit, Americans also use the same word to mean that food. If you mean "jam" as in "stuck together," Americans use that word in the same context, but also use the word "cram."
No, the word 'jammed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to jam. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The word 'jam' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'jam' is a common noun, a general word for an instance of something impeding motion or a thing wedged in a way that is difficult or impossible to remove; a general word for a difficult situation or predicament; a general word for a preserve made from whole fruit boiled with sugar; a word for any jam of any kind.The noun form of the verb to jam is the gerund, jamming.
He liked to eat grape jam on his sandwiches. A door can jam if the wood absorbs water and begins to swell. There was a jam session held the night before the concert.
The spelling is jam (same as a traffic jam or a jar of jam), meaning a tight spot.The homophone (sound-alike word) is jamb, part of a door frame.
The word for a primarily Creole rice dish is jambalaya.
The British word "jam" can mean a couple of things. If you mean the food, a sweet paste of fruit, Americans also use the same word to mean that food. If you mean "jam" as in "stuck together," Americans use that word in the same context, but also use the word "cram."
It's spelled the same as in English.
The German word for jam is marmelade
Currant jam is probably Black Current, thus not the same as plumb
The noun jam is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a food, a word for a thing. The word jam is also a verb.
There is a Malayalam word "tickuka" which means make jam or rush in a queue or in a gruop.if some body say "tickunnh" same pronounciation as ticking it means somebody is making jam or rush.
because in the name Animal Jam there is the word JAM
No, the word 'jammed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to jam. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The word 'jam' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'jam' is a common noun, a general word for an instance of something impeding motion or a thing wedged in a way that is difficult or impossible to remove; a general word for a difficult situation or predicament; a general word for a preserve made from whole fruit boiled with sugar; a word for any jam of any kind.The noun form of the verb to jam is the gerund, jamming.
jam of tarts = prostitutes. Replace the word protitites with 'jam of tarts' in any sentence.
mrebaa مُرَبّى