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English

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Etymology

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From slam +‎ -er.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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slammer (plural slammers)

  1. One who, or that which, slams.
    • 1989, Jane Howard, Margaret Mead: A Life, page 27:
      Margaret was also, by her own admission, a determined slammer of doors.
  2. (slang, usually "the slammer") Jail, prison.
    • 1971 June 7, “Better Than Prison”, in Time:
      A man being sentenced for starving some horses chose 24 hours in the slammer with no food rather than seven days with the regular amenities.
  3. A tequila cocktail that is slammed onto a surface to induce fizzing.
  4. One who takes part in slam-dance.
  5. One who competes in a poetry slam.
  6. In the game of Pogs, the heavier piece used to strike the stack of counters.
    • 1997, Iona Archibald Opie, Peter Opie, Children's Games with Things, page 120:
      The basic modern 'Pog' game is played thus. Each child tosses a pog into the arena, face-up or face-down, as agreed. Each player in turn takes his slammer and pitches it hard onto the accumulated pile of pogs.
  7. (UK, slang) A slam-door train.
    • 2009, Claude Lambert, On Pets and Men, page 33:
      I was in Britain, wanting to take a train to Portsmouth, and I only needed a one-way ticket. I did love the English trains; we still had slammers then. A slammer is a train where you got to slam the door shut yourself.

Derived terms

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Translations

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Anagrams

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French

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Pronunciation

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Verb

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slammer

  1. to crowdsurf
  2. to take part in a poetry slam

Conjugation

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Swedish

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Etymology

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Deverbal from slamra.

Noun

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slammer n

  1. clatter, clattering

Declension

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References

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