the vb. or sb. in combination.
1. [cf. CRAM v. 2, sb. 1.] cram-cake, † (a) ? fried cake, pancake; (b) = CRAM sb. 1 (dial.); † cram-maid, ? a woman who crams or fattens fowls, a poultry-woman; † cram-paste, ? = cram-cake.
1382. Wyclif, Ex. xxix. 2. Therf cramcakes wett with oyle [1388 therf paast sodun in watir, bawmed, ether fried, with oile].
c. 1450. Alphita (Anecd. Oxon.), 137. Placente sunt panes facti azima per quoddam artificium angl. Cram-pastes.
1483. Cath. Angl., 80/1. Cram kake, collirida, laganum.
1622. Althorp MS., in Simpkinson, Washingtons, p. xxxi. To the Cram maide. Ibid. (1634), xiii. 4. Woodden platters for the cramaid.
1888. Sheffield Gloss., Addit., Cram cake, a cake made of oatmeal or other coarse meal for feeding fowls.
2. [cf. CRAM v. 6, sb. 4.] cram-book, a book used for cramming a subject; cram-boy (nonce-wd.), a boy who has been crammed for an examination; cram-coach, a tutor who crams pupils for an examination; cram-man (nonce-wd.), cf. cram-boy above; cram-paper, a paper of items to be crammed for an examination. (All colloq.)
1858. Sat. Rev., 14 Aug., 150. Cramming, crammers, and cram-books, are the fruits of this examination system . A cram-man is worthless enough . But a cram-boy is simply made less healthy and more conceited.
1883. E. R. Lankester, Advancemt. Science (1890), 116. The drudgery of popular lecturing and cram-book writing.
1885. M. Pattison, Mem., 292. The successful cram-coach.
1888. Daily News, 29 June, 5/1. Partially to abolish the cram-creating system of payment by results.