0 to fill very full -- proppe; overfylde
The drawer was crammed with papers.
2 to prepare (someone) in a short time for an examination -- manuducere
He is being crammed for his university entrance exam.
Maybe some of the students, having been crammed at school, are trying to keep up at university.
The recovery and pre-med rooms are overcrowded, and the cramming of beds makes care difficult.
There is real enthusiasm on the part of new magistrates in seeking instruction, but they do not want to be crammed with it.
You see people crammed in cars going to the seaside in order that the children can have the chance of a day on the sands.
Cramming yet another on to an overstretched head without proper preparation courts disaster.
Nevertheless, we still have trouble cramming in all the business that comes before us.
We do not want more and more town cramming—there must be a balance throughout the country.
I feel sure that with suitable cramming he would qualify.