Definition of "jimjam"
jimjam
noun
countable and uncountable, plural jimjams
Placeholder word for a thing or person nonspecific, unknown or forgotten; thingamabob.
Quotations
Ye should have done well to shew us with which foot the pope did set on the crown upon Henry's head, the right or the left, standing, sitting, leaning, or lying, barefooted and using the help of his great toe or shod, whether he had some jimjam made for him to take it up, hold it, and put it on handsomely, or conveyed it on by a vice, or how it was done.
1848, John Jewel (Richard William Jelf, ed), The works of John Jewel, D.D., Bishop of Salisbury
Quotations
adjective
not comparable
verb
third-person singular simple present jimjams, present participle jimjamming, simple past and past participle jimjammed
To cram together in a jumbled fashion.
Quotations
And because of the jumbled layout of the city—old prefabs mingling with equally utilitarian new construction and makeshift hovels jimjammed in every which way—an agile person who could jump as well as she could would be able to travel a good distance going from roof to roof.
2015, Teresa Noelle Roberts, Bad Kitty
Quotations
They would jimjam and jitterbug flirtatiously up and around the bump in his lower nape and behind the ridge of his ear for a minute or two, and then as if yanked up and away by some resentful mother spider disappear until the next day or the day after when they would dance just a little bit longer than the time before -- until he found he could almost command their presence.
2015, Ernesto Mestre, The Lazarus Rumba: A Novel, page 1