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Glom

Finders keepers.

Dear Word Detective:  I recently finished a crossword puzzle containing the answer “glom.”  I was able to determine this from having seen it in previous puzzles.  It is, apparently, a slang word for “seize.”  I would have guessed “grab” or “nab,” if they fit the puzzle.  Is “glom”  referring to “seize” in the context of a car engine seizing up after running out of oil?  I have never encountered this word outside of a crossword puzzle. — Anthony Goldstein.

That’s a good question, and I’m sorry it took me a while to get around to answering it.  I get so many questions that I often put aside the good ones for later use.  Unfortunately, I also sometimes forget to look at my “to do” file.  For a year or two.  And then I’m afraid to.  I have the horrible feeling that there are questions in there about things Monica Lewinski said to Ken Starr back in 1998.  Oh well, sic transit gloria mundi.  It’s a good thing the Romans didn’t have email, or I’d be apologizing to them, too.

Your question jumped out at me way back when because I was surprised that you had never run into the word “glom” before.  I remember hearing and using it back in the late 1960s, and while I wouldn’t say that it’s a core element of my vocabulary, I still probably use it at least every few months.  It also seems fairly popular in the media, and a search of Google News  produces current examples from sources as disparate as The Huffington Post (“And you remember when conservatives thought stopping people from ‘glomming’ off government programs was a good thing.”) and Science Daily (“The nanoparticles ‘glom onto the flies,’ Rand noted while watching a video of flies in the test tubes.”).

In any case, “to glom” does mean, as you gathered, “to grab, snatch, seize or steal,” and it’s usually used in the phrase “to glom on to.”  It’s used, of course, to mean literally “to steal” (“I learnt that stealing clothes from a clothes-line is expressed in Hoboland by the hilarious phrase, ‘Glomming the grape-vine’,” 1925).  But “glom” is also often used in a more figurative sense to mean “to appropriate preemptively” (“I got to the wedding early, but the groom’s drinking buddies had already glommed on to all the good seats”) or “to attach oneself to another person with unwarranted familiarity” (“I tried to talk to Debbie at the party, but some dork had glommed on to her and was talking her ear off”).

There are two surprising facts about “glom.”  One is that it is a fairly old word, first recorded in English in 1907, albeit with a slightly different spelling (“We … discovered that our hands were gloved. ‘Where’d ye glahm ’em?’ I asked. ‘Out of an engine-cab,’ he answered,” The Road, Jack London).  The other is that “glom” has a distinguished pedigree.  It’s simply a form of the Scots word  “glaum,” meaning “to snatch,” which in turn comes from the Gaelic “glam,” meaning “to grab or clutch.”  It’s still considered slang in English, so it’s probably best not to use it in memos to your boss (“Third Quarter widget sales are slightly down due to Acme glomming on to our Panamanian market share”), but for everyday use, “glom” is a very handy little word.

8 comments to Glom

  • Frank Townend

    “It never rains, it pours”

    Having learned the new word “glom” and having been invited to visit your wife’s “How Come” Web site, I saw she used the word “glom” twice. Once in the article “Why is soap so slippery?” and again in the article “What is the hot chocolate effect?”

    Small world isn’t it?

  • Dan Schwartz

    I’m not too surprised that the original questioner never encountered the word “glom”, as it seems to be used only in limited circumstances. I first heard the word when I worked for a time as a livery cab driver. To “glom” a trip had the very specific meaning of picking up a customer for a short trip and getting paid for it without reporting the trip to the dispatcher, thereby keeping the full fare, rather than just the percentage that you normally got. It was years before I heard the word in any context other than that, and I often wondered where it came from.

  • Vicky Ayers

    Of course, there is “Flintheart Glomgold” the arch-rival of Donald Duck’s rich uncle, Scrooge McDuck. Never underestimate the educational power of comic books.

  • BILL HACKETT

    I GREW UP IN THE LATE FORTIES AND FIFTIES IN AN IRISH-AMERICAN FAMILY, LET ME TELL YOU THERE WAS LOT OF “GLOMMING” GOING ON AT OUR NINE PERSON DINNER TABLE.

  • […] last longer when they are stable. Many of these aren’t really additives at all, instead they glom (with molecular attraction) onto unwanted particles and are removed from the finished wine. […]

  • Lee Donovan

    The animated Star Trek series used an interesting version of this word for a creature, genetically created, that grabbed and devoured Tribbles, called a “glommer.”

  • oscar

    I grew up in Phoenix and never heard the word ‘glom’ until high school, in the fifties. It seemed to be a regional thing, perhaps coming out of Chicago or maybe Missouri. The term was not limited in use at all, to the users around me it meant to grab on to something, anything, advantageously for your own use.

  • Joe Bartlett

    Glom may not have originated this way but beginning I the 1980s I found it in common usage among rock climbers (at least in California) to describe grabbing onto rocks as in “he was able to glom on to that small bump on the right.”

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