seam
noun /siːm/
/siːm/
Idioms - a line along which two edges of cloth, etc. are joined or sewn together
- a shoulder seam
Wordfinder- baste
- bind
- embroidery
- hem
- lining
- seam
- sew
- stitch
- tack
- thread
Extra Examples- She sewed the seam with small neat stitches.
- I only had the shoes for a month before they started to fall apart at the seams.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverb + seam- sew
- stitch
- press
- …
- be bursting at the seams
- come apart at the seams
- fall apart at the seams
- …
- a thin layer of coal or other material, between layers of rock under the ground
- They struck a rich seam of iron ore.
- (figurative) The book is a rich seam of information.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- coal
- rich
- narrow
- …
- exploit
- mine
- a line where two edges meet, for example the edges of wooden boards
- Light was spilling in through the seams of the door.
Word OriginOld English sēam, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch zoom and German Saum.
Idioms
be bursting/bulging at the seams
- (informal) to be very full, especially of people
- Los Angeles is bursting at the seams with would-be actors.
- The film is bursting at the seams with good performances.
be falling/coming apart at the seams
- (informal) to be going very badly wrong and likely to stop functioning completely
- She was falling apart at the seams, spending most of her time in tears.
- His little world fell apart at the seams.
- Their marriage was coming apart at the seams.
fray at/around the edges/seams
- to start to come apart or to fail
- Support for the leader was fraying at the edges.