different between blam vs blah

blam

English

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): [?blæm], [?blam]
  • Rhymes: -æm

Etymology 1

By onomatopoeia.

Noun

blam (plural blams)

  1. A sudden, explosive sound, such as is made by a gunshot
    He kicked in the door with a blam.

Interjection

blam

  1. A sudden, explosive sound, such as is made by a gunshot
    That the last zombie? Here. Let me get that for ya. *BLAM!*

Verb

blam (third-person singular simple present blams, present participle blamming, simple past and past participle blammed) (slang, MLE, regional African-American Vernacular)

  1. (intransitive) To shoot, to let gunfire pass.
  2. (transitive) To shoot, to kill by gunshot.
Derived terms
  • blam up (= to shoot up) 

Etymology 2

Blend of blog +? spam

Noun

blam (uncountable)

  1. (Internet, informal) spam posted to a blog
    • 2012, Martin Peitz, Joel Waldfogel, The Oxford Handbook of the Digital Economy
      [] we refer to unsolicited and unwanted advertising as spam. The phenomenon is widespread, and has led people to coin terms for it in other information product or service contexts, such as splog or blam (unsolicited advertisements in blog comments), spim (instant messaging), []

Anagrams

  • ALBM, BAML, LBMA, Lamb, balm, lamb

Middle English

Noun

blam

  1. (rare) Alternative form of blame

Serbo-Croatian

Etymology

Back-formation from blamírati.

Noun

bl?m m (Cyrillic spelling ?????)

  1. (Serbia, colloquial) (feeling of) embarrassment

Related terms

  • blamáža ((an instance of) embarrassment)
  • blamírati (to embarrass)

blam From the web:

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blah

English

Etymology

  • Sense “Idle, meaningless talk” (1940), probably imitative or echoic in origin. Perhaps, but cf Greek "barbarbar” ‘unintelligible sounds’ (Grillo 1989:174).
  • Adjective sense “bland, dull” (1919), perhaps influenced by French blasé (bored, indifferent).
  • The blahs (“boredom, mild depression”) first attested 1969; extension of adjective sense and influenced by term the blues.
  • Also may be connected with bleat

GRILLO, R.D. 1989. Dominant languages: Language and hierarchy in Britain and France. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /bl??/
  • IPA(key): /bla/
  • Rhymes: -??

Noun

blah (countable and uncountable, plural blahs)

  1. (uncountable, informal) Nonsense; drivel; idle, meaningless talk.
  2. (informal) (in plural, the blahs) A general or ambiguous feeling of discomfort, dissatisfaction, uneasiness, boredom, mild depression, etc.

Synonyms

  • (nonsense, drivel): bosh, bombast, bunkum, claptrap, eyewash, fustian, rant, hooey, humbug, rubbish, twaddle
  • (feeling of boredom, mild depression): malaise

Translations

Adjective

blah (comparative more blah, superlative most blah)

  1. (informal) Dull; uninteresting; insipid.
    Well, the new restaurant seems nice, but their menu is a little blah.
  2. (informal) Low in spirit or health; down.
    I decided to go exercise rather than sit around all day feeling blah.

Interjection

blah

  1. An expression of mild frustration.
    Synonyms: bah, blast, drat, (archaic) fie
    Blah! Why can't I get this computer to work!
  2. (When spoken repeatedly, often three times in succession: blah blah blah!) Imitative of idle, meaningless talk; used sometimes in a slightly derogatory manner to mock or downplay another's words, or to show disinterest in a diatribe, rant, instructions, unsolicited advice, parenting, etc. Also used when recalling and retelling another's words, as a substitute for the portions of the speech deemed irrelevant.
    Synonyms: blah blah, blah blah blah, yada yada yada
    Yeah, yeah, blah blah blah, Mom, you said this all yesterday.
    And then he was like, "Oh, my brother's an Internet millionaire, blah blah blah." Like I care!
  3. Representing the sound of vomiting.
    Synonyms: bleah, blech, bleh

Translations

Verb

blah (third-person singular simple present blahs, present participle blahing, simple past and past participle blahed)

  1. (intransitive) To utter idle, meaningless talk.
    • 2015, Tony Blair, Jeremy Corbyn’s politics are fantasy – just like Alice in Wonderland (in The Guardian, 29 August 2015) [1]
      Someone else said to me: “If you’re writing something again, don’t blah on about winning elections; it really offends them.”

See also

  • barbarian
  • rhubarb

Anagrams

  • Bahl

blah From the web:

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  • bahaha mean
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  • blah day meaning
  • what blushing means
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