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Justin4Fun

Posted

When I was younger, it was often used in slang.
"I'm going to ream you a new one."

 

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drpaladin

Posted

Ream has a multitude of meanings. One is 500 sheets of paper or in the plural, a large amount of anything. It can also mean to cheat or victimize, or reprimand (as in ream out).

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Justin4Fun

Posted

6 minutes ago, drpaladin said:

It can also mean to cheat or victimize, or reprimand (as in ream out).

Isn't this usage an extension of the slang? Where the term 'ream out' became more standard from the more abrasive implications?

Just thinking out loud, and not thinking right either, cause I'm sleepy

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Cia

Posted

Makes me think of the hole saws construction guys use. 😂

image.png

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Justin4Fun

Posted

4 minutes ago, Cia said:

Makes me think of the hole saws construction guys use. 😂

image.png

Holy construction tools, Batman!!!

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drpaladin

Posted

40 minutes ago, Justin4Fun said:

Isn't this usage an extension of the slang? Where the term 'ream out' became more standard from the more abrasive implications?

Just thinking out loud, and not thinking right either, cause I'm sleepy

Slang often does enter into proper and common usage.

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Bill W

Posted

6 hours ago, drpaladin said:

Ream has a multitude of meanings. One is 500 sheets of paper or in the plural, a large amount of anything. It can also mean to cheat or victimize, or reprimand (as in ream out).

I think you have a homonym.  A collection of 500 sheets of paper is a REEM. 

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drpaladin

Posted

1 hour ago, Bill W said:

I think you have a homonym.  A collection of 500 sheets of paper is a REEM. 

No, ream is correct.

Reem was a horned animal in ancient Hebrew literature or in nautical terms, to open the seams of planking to caulk them.

 

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Bill W

Posted

6 minutes ago, drpaladin said:

No, ream is correct.

Reem was a horned animal in ancient Hebrew literature or in nautical terms, to open the seams of planking to caulk them.

 

mea culpa

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drpaladin

Posted

3 minutes ago, Bill W said:

mea culpa

I can still see it in my mind's eye on boxes of stationary in the supply room around sixty years ago, though back then it was 480 sheets.

I absolutely hated my mother taking me to the office. It only happened when the nanny was sick.

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drpaladin

Posted

I did run across another meaning for ream, cream or froth.

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Justin4Fun

Posted

15 minutes ago, drpaladin said:

I did run across another meaning for ream, cream or froth.

I'm sorry, but synonyms rhyming is just wrong...
ream - cream...

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JamesSavik

Posted

When a lawyer is smiling, you're about to get reamed.

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drpaladin

Posted

1 hour ago, Justin4Fun said:

I'm sorry, but synonyms rhyming is just wrong...
ream - cream...

Au contraire, these type of tidbits make the English language so much fun to play with.

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sandrewn

Posted (edited)

2 hours ago, drpaladin said:

I can still see it in my mind's eye on boxes of stationary in the supply room around sixty years ago, though back then it was 480 sheets.

I absolutely hated my mother taking me to the office. It only happened when the nanny was sick.

The first employment I had out of high school was with a company called, 'Adams Engraving & Embossing' (1969). Inventory Control Assistant (read gopher), I learned a heck of a lot about paper quantities, not to mention just how heavy a shipment of it could be(bundles & bales). My gross weekly pay was about $27. The only perk I got was that I was allowed to make (on my own time) my own embossed business card.

Back to your comment, 480 sheets was(still is) called a 'short' ream. Today 500 sheets(what you buy in stores) is also known as a 'long' ream.

Flash back to me. I lasted 6 months there, then I joined the military and the rest as they say is history.

:cowboy:

Units of paper quantity - Wikipedia

Edited by sandrewn
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