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Discover LudwigThe phrase "cram with" is grammatically correct and commonly used in written English.
It means to fill or pack something tightly with objects or information. Example: The study guide was crammed with notes, highlighting, and sticky tabs.
Exact(3)
The spelling contest, however, relies not on YIVO linguists but on Webster's Third New International Dictionary, and that is what contestants cram with, said a bee spokesman, Chris Kemper.
Jayaram has built a 75-millimeter-tall robot, called CRAM, with a roachlike collapsible exoskeleton and legs with "spines" that work both in the uncompressed and compressed positions.
It scales nearly linearly up to 16 cores, but with some performance inefficiencies becoming visible in CRAM with high core counts, especially for decoding.
Similar(52)
Each page is crammed with statistics.
Her book is crammed with quizzes.
And each is crammed with talking points.
Now it has been crammed with statuary.
The sky is crammed with stars.
The counter crammed with its gleaming kitchenware.
Each song was crammed with information.
It is crammed with gore.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com