Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Slam-bang
Slam′-bangˊ
,adv.
With great violence; with a slamming or banging noise.
[Colloq.]
Definition 2024
slam-bang
slam-bang
See also: slambang
English
Adjective
- (onomatopoeia) Noisy, raucous.
- 1959, Saul Bellow, Henderson the Rain King, 1996 Penguin Classics edition, ISBN 0140189424, page 173,
- At a signal from Horko's box there was an all-out, slam-bang, grand salute of the guns and with it a pounding of the deep liquid bass drums.
- 2001, V. C. Andrews, Cinnamon, Simon and Schuster, ISBN 074342171X, page 188,
- Their arguments weren't pleasant to hear or to watch, but they weren't yet having the all-out, slam-bang quarrels they would have when I was older.
- 2003, Jacquelyn Mitchard, Christmas, Present, HarperCollins, ISBN 0060565578, page 2,
- Fifteen years of marriage in full would cry out for a slam-bang celebration.
- 1959, Saul Bellow, Henderson the Rain King, 1996 Penguin Classics edition, ISBN 0140189424, page 173,
- Violent, forceful
- 1932, P. G. Wodehouse, "Monkey Business",
- "If you had led the rough, tough, slam-bang, every-man-for-himself life I have, you wouldn't be frightened of gorillas...."
- 2000, Linda Parent Lesher, The Best Novels of the Nineties: A Reader's Guide, McFarland & Company, ISBN 0786407425, page 99
- Temporary Agency begins with a tale of demonic possession and adolescent crushes and ends with a slam-bang, all-out global confrontation between the forces of good and evil.
- 2004, Lindsey Davis, Scandal Takes a Holiday, Mysterious Press, ISBN 0892968125, page 4,
- The boy seemed streetwise yet clearly unaware that this was an officer whose slam-bang interrogation methods were a legend.
- 2007, John Dunning, The Bookwoman's Last Fling: A Cliff Janeway Novel, Simon and Schuster, ISBN 1416523391, page 2
- The waiter took my order, a slam-bang something with eggs and pancakes: enough cholesterol to power the whole state of Idaho.
- 1932, P. G. Wodehouse, "Monkey Business",
- Impressive, exciting.
- 1961, Joseph Heller, Catch-22, chapter 2,
- "I'm a real, slam-bang, honest-to-goodness, three-fisted humdinger. I'm a bona fide supraman."
- 2004 March 18–24, Jack Harvey (pseudonym), "Once Again, Oscar Is King Of The Rings", in The Onion, available in Embedded in America, ISBN 1400054567, page 114,
- After this slam-bang production, the next is sure to be a huge letdown.
- 2005, John Reed, The Whole, Simon and Schuster, ISBN 1416513108, page 43,
- An eentsy-weentsy office with a slam-bang T1 connection that she couldn't figure out how to hook up to her slam-bang computer that she couldn't figure out how to plug in.
- 1961, Joseph Heller, Catch-22, chapter 2,
Adverb
- Shot or hit with a noise
- 19th cent., Robert Montgomery Bird, Nick of the Woods, 1967 Rowman & Littlefield edition, ISBN 0808402358, page 48,
- Well! as soon as I jumped out of his way, bang went his piece, and bang went another, let fly by an Injun;—down went the Major, shot right through the hips, slam-bang.
- 19th cent., Robert Montgomery Bird, Nick of the Woods, 1967 Rowman & Littlefield edition, ISBN 0808402358, page 48,
Noun
slam-bang (plural slam-bangs)
- (onomatopoeia) Noisy activity.
- 2005, Monica Wood, Any Bitter Thing: A Novel, Chronicle Books, ISBN 0811846040, page 71,
- From far down the hall came the staccato notes of a new term, the slam-bang of teachers flinging open cabinets, filling trash cans, stapling lists to bulletin boards, dragging desks into optimistic configurations.
- 1985, Paul Theroux, "Introduction", to, Henry James, What Maisie Knew, Penguin Classics, ISBN 0140432485, page 13,
- But James in describing the slam-bang of her upbringing has given us every reason for her turning out crazy, vengeful or anti-social.
- 2005, Monica Wood, Any Bitter Thing: A Novel, Chronicle Books, ISBN 0811846040, page 71,