Idioms for drum
beat the drum,
to promote, publicize, or advertise: The boss is out beating the drum for a new product.
Origin of drum
1
1535–45; back formation from
drumslade drum, drummer, alteration of Dutch or Low German
trommelslag drumbeat, equivalent to
trommel drum +
slag beat (akin to
slagen to beat; cognate with
slay)
OTHER WORDS FROM drum
un·der·drum·ming, nounWords nearby drum
British Dictionary definitions for drum out (1 of 3)
drum out
verb
(tr, adverb usually foll by of)
- to expel from a club, association, etc
- (formerly) to dismiss from military service to the beat of a drum
British Dictionary definitions for drum out (2 of 3)
drum
1
/ (drʌm) /
noun
verb drums, drumming or drummed
Word Origin for drum
C16: probably from Middle Dutch
tromme, of imitative origin
British Dictionary definitions for drum out (3 of 3)
drum
2
/ (drʌm) /
noun
Scot and Irish
a narrow ridge or hill
Word Origin for drum
C18: from Scottish Gaelic
druim
Medical definitions for drum out
drum
[ drŭm ]
n.
eardrum
Idioms and Phrases with drum out
drum out
Expel or dismiss publicly and in disgrace, as in They drummed him out of the club. This usage, which alludes to dismissal from a military service to the beat of a drum, began to be applied to civilian expulsions in the mid-1700s.