Talk:ram-packed

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Latest comment: 6 years ago by Kiwima in topic RFV discussion: January 2018
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RFV discussion: January 2018

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I just heard this word for the first time last night in TV show from a year or so ago with a clip of Jeremy Corbyn and I wondered if it's a new or just a regional variant of jam-packed.

He used it in mid-2016 and the Wiktionary page was created in mid-2016 with a formulaic uninformative etymology. Google Ngrams has zero uses recorded with hyphen, space, or as a single word.

I'm not the only one to notice. Here's some articles I've found on the topic:

So let's see if it meets our CFI, if it was a nonce slip of the tongue, or if it has an interesting history we can elucidate via expanding the etymology section and adding citations.

Specifically, was it already in use pre-Corbyn pre-2016, when does it trace back to, and did his usage popularize it, causing it to be begin being widely used? — hippietrail (talk) 21:35, 17 January 2018 (UTC)Reply

I can find uses dating back as far as 1941 - although those are more SOP - meaning packed with a ram. For this more figurative meaning, the earliest I have found so far is 1953. Clearly it was not coined by Corbyn in 2016 - and from the SOP citations, my guess is that it grew out of that, rather than a blend of ram-jam and jam-packed. Also, on the Citations page I added a quote that uses it as an adverb. Kiwima (talk) 01:54, 18 January 2018 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for that. One of the best sounding theories I read in the links I provided was that this has long been a regularly used term in Jamaica and that Corbyn spent time in Jamaica when he was younger. It would be interesting to investigate that angle. — hippietrail (talk) 22:12, 18 January 2018 (UTC)Reply

RFV-passed Kiwima (talk) 20:50, 26 January 2018 (UTC)Reply