gram
1 Americannoun
noun
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(in the East Indies) the chickpea used as a food for people and cattle.
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any of several other beans, as the mung bean, Vigna radiata green gram, or golden gram, or the urd, V. mungo black gram.
noun
abbreviation
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grammar.
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grammarian.
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grammatical.
noun
abbreviation
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grammar
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grammatical
noun
combining form
noun
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any of several leguminous plants, such as the beans Phaseolus mungo ( black gram or urd ) and P. aureus ( green gram ), whose seeds are used as food in India
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the seed of any of these plants
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A unit of mass in the metric system, equal to 0.001 kilogram or 0.035 ounce.
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See Table at measurement
Usage
What does -gram mean? The combining form -gram is used like a suffix that has three distinct senses.The first of these senses is “something written” or "drawing" and this form of -gram is frequently used in a variety of scientific and technical terms. This meaning of -gram comes from Greek grámma, meaning “something written or drawn.”The second of these senses is “gram,” as in "one-thousandth of a kilogram," and this form of -gram is occasionally used in a variety of technical terms. This meaning of -gram also ultimately comes from Greek grámma but in the sense of "a small weight."The third of these senses is “message; bulletin.” This form of -gram is very occasionally used in a variety of technical terms, and its meaning is extracted from telegram. Find out more about the word telegram at our entry for the word.
Etymology
Origin of gram1
1790–1800; < French gramme < Late Latin gramma a small weight < Greek grámma something drawn, a small weight
Origin of gram2
First recorded in 1695–1705; from Portuguese grão, from Latin grānum “seed, grain, kernel”; grain
Origin of Gram3
From the Old Norse word Gramr literally, angry, evil
Origin of -gram4
< Greek -gramma, combining form of grámma something written or drawn; akin to carve
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.