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Synonyms

jam-up

American  
[jam-uhp] / ˈdʒæmˌʌp /

noun

  1. a stoppage or slowing of motion, work, or the like, due to obstruction, overloading, malfunction, or inefficiency; jam.

    Your letters didn't go out yesterday because there was a jam-up in the mail room.


Etymology

Origin of jam-up

First recorded in 1940–45; noun use of verb phrase jam up

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.

Also, millions will watch a 13-player jam-up on Sunday for the pure — U.S.

From Washington Post • Jun. 17, 2017

Instead of sabotaging the oil lift by failing to boost production appreciably, Texas had done a "jam-up job," had helped make it "amazingly successful, all reports to the contrary notwithstanding."

From Time Magazine Archive

For many companies, the jam-up has had an unnerving effect.

From Time Magazine Archive

Although they fly thousands of miles away from the U.S., the Maltese pilots found themselves in an almost daily radio jam-up because airliner controllers in Atlanta, Ga., were broadcasting on their frequency.

From Time Magazine Archive

"No, not an intimate, but he was in my class—and he's a whacking, jam-up, ace-high football player."

From The Chase of the Golden Plate by Futrelle, Jacques