beam
Americannoun
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any of various relatively long pieces of metal, wood, stone, etc., manufactured or shaped especially for use as rigid members or parts of structures or machines.
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Building Trades. a horizontal bearing member, as a joist or lintel.
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Engineering. a rigid member or structure supported at each end, subject to bending stresses from a direction perpendicular to its length.
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Nautical.
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a horizontal structural member, usually transverse, for supporting the decks and flats of a vessel.
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the extreme width of a vessel.
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the shank of an anchor.
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Aeronautics. the direction perpendicular to the plane of symmetry of an aircraft and outward from the side.
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the widest part.
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Slang. the measure across both hips or buttocks.
broad in the beam.
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Machinery.
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(in a loom) a roller or cylinder on which the warp is wound before weaving.
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a similar cylinder on which cloth is wound as it is woven.
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the crossbar of a balance, from the ends of which the scales or pans are suspended.
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a ray of light.
The sun shed its beams upon the vineyard.
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a group of nearly parallel rays.
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Radio, Aeronautics. a signal transmitted along a narrow course, used to guide pilots through darkness, bad weather, etc.
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Electronics. a narrow stream of electrons, as that emitted from the electron gun of a cathode ray tube.
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the angle at which a microphone or loudspeaker functions best.
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the cone-shaped range of effective use of a microphone or loudspeaker.
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Citizens Band Radio Slang. beam antenna.
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a gleam; suggestion.
a beam of hope.
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a radiant smile.
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the principal stem of the antler of a deer.
verb (used with object)
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to emit in or as in beams or rays.
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Radio. to transmit (a signal) in a particular direction.
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Radio and Television. to direct (a program, commercial message, etc.) to a predetermined audience.
verb (used without object)
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to emit beams, as of light.
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to smile radiantly or happily.
idioms
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fly the beam, (of an aircraft) to be guided by a beam.
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off the beam,
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not on the course indicated by a radio beam.
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Informal. wrong; incorrect.
The pollsters were off the beam again for the last presidential election.
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beam in, to be received under optimum conditions; be heard loud and clear.
They told me I was really beaming in.
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on the beam,
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on the course indicated by a radio beam, as an airplane.
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Nautical. at right angles to the keel.
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Informal. proceeding well; correct; exact.
Their research is right on the beam and the results should be very valuable.
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noun
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a long thick straight-sided piece of wood, metal, concrete, etc, esp one used as a horizontal structural member
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any rigid member or structure that is loaded transversely
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the breadth of a ship or boat taken at its widest part, usually amidships
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a ray or column of light, as from a beacon
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a broad smile
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one of the two cylindrical rollers on a loom, one of which holds the warp threads before weaving, the other the finished work
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the main stem of a deer's antler from which the smaller branches grow
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the central shaft of a plough to which all the main parts are attached
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a narrow unidirectional flow of electromagnetic radiation or particles
a beam of light
an electron beam
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the horizontal centrally pivoted bar in a balance
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informal the width of the hips (esp in the phrase broad in the beam )
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a fault or grave error greater in oneself than in another person
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not following a radio beam to maintain a course
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informal wrong, mistaken, or irrelevant
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following a radio beam to maintain a course
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nautical opposite the beam of a vessel; abeam
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informal correct, relevant, or appropriate
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verb
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to send out or radiate (rays of light)
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(tr) to divert or aim (a radio signal or broadcast, light, etc) in a certain direction
to beam a programme to Tokyo
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to pass (data, esp business card details, etc) from one hand-held computer to another by means of infrared beams
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(intr) to smile broadly with pleasure or satisfaction
Related Words
Other Word Forms
Etymology
Origin of beam
First recorded before 900; Middle English beem, Old English bēam “tree, post, ray of light”; cognate with Old Frisian bām, Old Saxon bōm, Dutch boom, Old High German boum ( German Baum ), Gothic bagms, Old Norse bathmr tree; the identity of the consonant which has assimilated itself to the following m is unclear, as is the original root; perhaps unattested Germanic bagmaz, from unattested bargmaz, from unattested Indo-European bhorǵh-mos “growth”; see barrow 2
Explanation
A beam is a long board that's used to hold up a roof or doorway. The beams in your kitchen ceiling help support the upstairs floor just above it. In construction, beams are made of wood or metal and are used to frame a building and provide structure. In gymnastics, a beam is used for balancing and doing tricks on. If someone comments that you're getting "broad in the beam," they're disparaging the width of your body, especially your hips. In Old English, a beam first meant a tree, and later a rafter or a ship's timber.
Vocabulary lists containing beam
Engineering - Introductory
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Structural Engineering
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Civil Engineering
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Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
The so-called fog of war and secrecy of special-forces operations make such disputes almost inevitable, according to Beam.
From The Wall Street Journal • Apr. 11, 2026
Bjorn Beam, head of geopolitical research at advisory firm Arcano Partners, previously used prediction markets as an input into his efforts to model global events.
From The Wall Street Journal • Apr. 11, 2026
"These magnons can transmit information through a magnet without the need for charge transport," explains project leader Dr. Helmut Schultheiß from the Institute of Ion Beam Physics and Materials Research at HZDR.
From Science Daily • Mar. 27, 2026
Jim Beam also said it is assessing how it will use its workforce during the production pause and is holding talks with the workers' union.
From BBC • Dec. 21, 2025
It was quiet in the officer’s room on Solar Station #5—except for the soft purring of the mighty Beam Director somewhere far below.
From "I, Robot" by Isaac Asimov
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.