| jam | | |
| jam | (n.) | preserve of crushed fruit. |
| fix, hole, jam, kettle of fish, mess, muddle, pickle | (n.) | informal terms for a difficult situation.; "he got into a terrible fix"; "he made a muddle of his marriage" |
| crush, jam, press | (n.) | a dense crowd of people. |
| electronic jamming, jam, jamming | (n.) | deliberate radiation or reflection of electromagnetic energy for the purpose of disrupting enemy use of electronic devices or systems. |
| jam, mob, pack, pile, throng | (v.) | press tightly together or cram.; "The crowd packed the auditorium" |
| jam | (v.) | push down forcibly.; "The driver jammed the brake pedal to the floor" |
| crush, jam | (v.) | crush or bruise.; "jam a toe" |
| block, jam | (v.) | interfere with or prevent the reception of signals.; "Jam the Voice of America"; "block the signals emitted by this station" |
| jam | (v.) | get stuck and immobilized.; "the mechanism jammed" |
| chock up, cram, jam, jampack, ram, wad | (v.) | crowd or pack to capacity.; "the theater was jampacked" |
| block, close up, impede, jam, obstruct, obturate, occlude | (v.) | block passage through.; "obstruct the path" |
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