Associations to the word «Ream»

Wiktionary

REAM, noun. (UK dialectal) (Northern England) (Scotland) Cream; also, the creamlike froth on ale or other liquor; froth or foam in general.
REAM, verb. (UK dialectal) (Northern England) (Scotland) To cream; mantle; foam; froth.
REAM, verb. To enlarge a hole, especially using a reamer; to bore a hole wider.
REAM, verb. To shape or form, especially using a reamer.
REAM, verb. To remove (material) by reaming.
REAM, verb. To remove burrs and debris from a freshly bored hole.
REAM, verb. (slang) To yell at or berate.
REAM, verb. (slang) (vulgar) To sexually penetrate in a rough and painful way, by analogy with definition 1.
REAM, noun. A bundle, package, or quantity of paper, nowadays usually containing 500 sheets.
REAM, noun. (chiefly in the plural) An abstract large amount of something.

Dictionary definition

REAM, noun. A large quantity of written matter; "he wrote reams and reams".
REAM, noun. A quantity of paper; 480 or 500 sheets; one ream equals 20 quires.
REAM, verb. Squeeze the juice out (of a fruit) with a reamer; "ream oranges".
REAM, verb. Remove by making a hole or by boring; "the dentist reamed out the debris in the course of the root canal treatment".
REAM, verb. Enlarge with a reamer; "ream a hole".

Wise words

Words are always getting conventionalized to some secondary meaning. It is one of the works of poetry to take the truants in custody and bring them back to their right senses.
William Butler Yeats