cram
cram — verb
- crampresent simple I / you / we / they
- cramshe / she / it
- crammedpast simple
- cramming-ing form
1. to press a large number of objects or people into an area that is significantly
to press a large number of objects or people into an area that is significantly smaller than normal, leaving little or no empty room
The train was so full that the passengers were crammed together like sardines.
passive: be crammed together for a tight space
Hyun tried to cram a week's worth of clothes into one small backpack.
cram + object + into + space
Anya crammed all the books into the locker, but the door would not shut.
The moving truck was crammed with furniture from top to bottom.
Trang crammed the leftover food into the tiny fridge until the door barely closed.
文法句型
cram + object + into + space
cram + into + space
be crammed with + things/people
用法筆記
Often used in the passive (be crammed with) to describe a space that is very full. The preposition 'into' introduces the destination container.
常見錯誤
2. to schedule so many events or tasks within a short period that the timeline feel
to schedule so many events or tasks within a short period that the timeline feels overcrowded and tight
Cole tried to cram three meetings into the hour before lunch.
cram + activities + into + time period
The conference schedule was crammed with talks and workshops from morning until evening.
passive: schedule crammed with + events
Sana crammed a full day's work into just four hours and then left early.
The festival organizers crammed too many performances onto one small stage.
- spread out
to arrange activities with generous time between them
文法句型
cram + activity + into + time period
用法筆記
The object is always a plan, schedule, or set of activities — never physical objects. The emphasis is on time pressure, not space.
常見錯誤
3. to prepare for a test by trying to learn a large amount of information in a very
to prepare for a test by trying to learn a large amount of information in a very short time, usually the night before
Niran stayed up all night cramming for the history exam the next morning.
cram + for + exam
Liam crammed the entire chemistry textbook in three days before the test.
cram + subject + in + time period
Some students cram the night before, but Wren prefers to study a little each week.
Tariro crammed for the math final by working through old exam papers all weekend.
Gabriela crammed the entire semester's notes the weekend before the final exam.
- swot
British informal synonym; slightly old-fashioned
- mug up
British informal, phrasal verb meaning to study hard before a test
- bone up on
less common but neutral register; can be used for any skill, not just exams
- review
studying material again at a relaxed pace, not under time pressure
文法句型
cram + for + exam
cram + subject + for + exam
cram + object (subject matter)
用法筆記
Frequently used as an intransitive verb with 'for' before the name of the exam. The transitive use (e.g., 'cram a subject') is less common in everyday conversation. This sense is informal — avoid it in academic writing.
常見錯誤
❌ 'I crammed for the exam, so I understood the topic deeply.' — Cramming implies last-minute memorisation, not deep understanding. Use 'studied' or 'reviewed' instead.