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rame over

C1

A very rare or dialectal/archaic term with no established standard meaning in modern English.

In plain English

This is not a recognised standard English phrasal verb.

What does "rame over" mean?

One main meaning — here's how to use it.

1 C1

Not a recognised standard English phrasal verb. May appear in rare dialectal texts.

Usage tip

'Rame over' does not appear as a standard phrasal verb in major English dictionaries or corpora. 'Rame' is a rare dialectal or archaic verb (meaning to cry out or to climb) found in some regional British dialects. Any combination with 'over' would be highly regional and not comprehensible to most English speakers. Learners should avoid this expression.

How to conjugate "rame over"

The five tense forms you'll use most often.

Base
rame over
I/you/we/they
3rd person
rames over
he/she/it
Past simple
ramed over
yesterday
Past participle
ramed over
have + pp
-ing form
raming over
continuous

Hear "rame over" in the wild

Listen to native speakers using "rame over" in real YouTube videos — click a clip to watch it on Looplines.

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