lam
2
[ lam ]
/ læm /
noun
a hasty escape; flight.
verb (used without object), lammed, lam·ming.
to run away quickly; escape; flee: I'm going to lam out of here as soon as I've finished.
Idioms for lam
on the lam,
escaping, fleeing, or hiding, especially from the police: He's been on the lam ever since he escaped from jail.
take it on the lam,
to flee or escape in great haste: The swindler took it on the lam and was never seen again.
Origin of lam
2
1885–90; special use of
lam1. Compare
beat it! be off!
Words nearby lam
British Dictionary definitions for on the lam (1 of 2)
lam
1
/ (læm) /
verb lams, lamming or lammed slang
(tr)
to thrash or beat
(intr; usually foll by into or out)
to make a sweeping stroke or blow
Word Origin for lam
C16: from Scandinavian; related to Old Norse
lemja
British Dictionary definitions for on the lam (2 of 2)
lam
2
/ (læm) US and Canadian slang /
noun
a sudden flight or escape, esp to avoid arrest
on the lam
- making an escape
- in hiding
verb lams, lamming or lammed
(intr)
to escape or flee
Word Origin for lam
C19: perhaps from
lam
1 (hence, to be off)
Idioms and Phrases with on the lam (1 of 2)
on the lam
Running away, especially from the police, as in He's always in some kind of trouble and perpetually on the lam. The origin of this slangy term of the 1800s is not known.
Idioms and Phrases with on the lam (2 of 2)
lam
see on the lam.