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dram
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
dram
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Cameron could sense James Menzies fidgeting and breathing beside him and he wondered if he had had a dram.
▪ If only I could see you - just once? all our drams, Vincent, where are they?
▪ It was weeks later before he realised it was one of his team, heading for a dram in Dunbar High Street.
▪ John produced the remains of a bottle of whisky and they all had a dram to celebrate.
▪ Maybe the wee dram given to me by one of the Sergeant instructors kept out the cold.
▪ The Highlanders were very generous, not only with their bagpipe reeds but also with their wee drams.
▪ There are 27.34 grains in one dram, 16 drams to one ounce and 16 ounces to one avoirdupois pound.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
DRAM

DRAM \DRAM\, D-RAM \D-RAM\n. (Computers) same as dynamic RAM. [acron.]

Syn: dynamic RAM.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
dram

mid-15c., "small weight of apothecary's measure," a phonetic spelling, from Anglo-Latin dragma, Old French drame, from Late Latin dragma, from Latin drachma "drachma," from Greek drakhma "measure of weight," also, "silver coin," literally "handful" (of six obols, the least valuable coins in ancient Athens), akin to drassesthai "to grasp." The fluid dram is one-eighth of a fluid ounce, hence "a small drink of liquor" (1713); Hence dram shop (1725), where liquor was sold by the shot.

Wiktionary
dram

Etymology 1 alt. 1 A unit of weight avoirdupois, 2 # (UK & US) 1/16 ounce avoirdupois. 3 # (UK & US) 1.77 gram 4 A minute quantity; a mite. 5 A small quantity of a drink, especially an alcoholic drink. 6 A cart formerly used to haul coal in coal mines. 7 A Persian daric. n. 1 A unit of weight avoirdupois, 2 # (UK & US) 1/16 ounce avoirdupois. 3 # (UK & US) 1.77 gram 4 A minute quantity; a mite. 5 A small quantity of a drink, especially an alcoholic drink. 6 A cart formerly used to haul coal in coal mines. 7 A Persian daric. vb. 1 (context dated English) To drink drams. 2 (context dated English) To ply with drams of drink. Etymology 2

n. (context currency English) The currency of Armenia, divided into 100 lum

WordNet
dram
  1. n. a unit of apothecary weight equal to an eighth of an ounce or to 60 grains [syn: drachm, drachma]

  2. 1/16 ounce or 1.771 grams

  3. the basic unit of money in Armenia

Wikipedia
Dram

Dram or DRAM may refer to:

Dram (unit)
''For the American hip hop artist, see D.R.A.M.

The dram (alternative British spelling drachm; apothecary symbol ʒ or ℨ; abbreviated dr) was originally both a coin and a weight in ancient Greece. It refers to a unit of mass in the avoirdupois system, and both a unit of mass and a unit of volume in the apothecaries' system. The unit of volume is more correctly called a fluid dram, fluid drachm, fluidram or fluidrachm (abbreviated fl dr, ƒ 3, or ).

Usage examples of "dram".

It was obvious to all that the man was dead, but Dram continued to hack at the body like an axman cutting wood, the body jumping and shuddering under the rain of blows.

The fine droplets hissed through the tree branches and spattered on the large, broad leaves with a rhythm like the bodhran drams of the old country.

North after Ovis Ammon--great rocks, you know, and leagues on end without a dram of water.

Dram roared orders, and a dozen disrupters opened fire at once, the joined energy blasts blowing the whole upper floor of the building apart in a shower of rubble and reddish clouds of pulverized bricks.

There were screams and shouts and explosions all around, and Dram grinned so widely his cheeks ached.

In every way that mattered, he was the Lord High Dram, Warrior Prime by popular acclaim, Widowmaker by destiny.

Which was the other reason why Dram was also known as the Widowmaker, though never to his face.

Dram, but the Widowmaker just stared calmly back, his hands nowhere near his weapons.

Aye, all the Lads, who push and who-pull, Ev'ry Master, ev'ry Pupil Single-ton and married Coople, Eye at Win-dow, Door and Looph'le, Ev'ry minim, dram and scruple Of their Praise is Thine, Octuple!

His louely words her seemd due recompenceOf all her passed paines: one louing howreFor many yeares of sorrow can dispence:A dram of sweet is worth a pound of sowre:She has forgot, how many a wofull stowreFor him she late endur'd.

Now, however, he did not care if all the fiends of Hell were dramming under Yanaidar.

Collins wished to be employ'd in some counting-house, but, whether they discover'd his dramming by his breath, or by his behaviour, tho' he had some recommendations, he met with no success in any application, and continu'd lodging and boarding at the same house with me, and at my expense.

Ignorant or insensible of royal distress, the rustic replied, that four drams of silver were the daily profit of his mill, and that he would not suspend his work unless the loss were repaid.

In the caliph's treasure were found a pearl as large as a pigeon's egg, a ruby weighing seventeen Egyptian drams, an emerald a palm and a half in length, and many vases of crystal and porcelain of China, (Renaudot, p.

Sometimes even the normal dose of four drams killed—but the Healers used it now and again to end the suffering of one they could not save.