This unique style suits coach Bill Laimbeer — whose teams have often ranked near the bottom of the league in 3-point shooting — and a roster missing Plum’s pick-and-roll wizardry and Cambage’s dominant interior scoring.
The Aces Don’t Need Threes To Win|Mike Prada|September 18, 2020|FiveThirtyEight
It was popularized as a holiday dessert in 16th-century England and also is known as Christmas pudding or plum pudding.
The Most Confusing Christmas Music Lyrics Explained (VIDEO)|Kevin Fallon|December 24, 2014|DAILY BEAST
At least those parents whose kids landed the plum roles will be.
Was Baby Jesus A Holy Terror?|Candida Moss|December 21, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Central won thirty-three consecutive games, and Suffridge became a plum for the college recruiters.
Football Great Bob Suffridge Wanders Through the End Zone of Life|Paul Hemphill|September 6, 2014|DAILY BEAST
After realizing how difficult this plum post would be, “Biden” writes that he “wised up and settled on my current fallback plan.”
Speed Read: 11 Best Bits from Joe Biden Satire ‘The President of Vice’|Caroline Linton|January 19, 2013|DAILY BEAST
In the GOP, controversialists like John Bolton and Elliott Abrams get plum foreign-policy jobs.
The Real Problem With Susan Rice|Peter Beinart|December 10, 2012|DAILY BEAST
And, when the upper shell was raised, on every dish lay a plum.
Juliana Horatia Ewing And Her Books|Horatia K. F. Eden
It feeds on blackthorn in May and June, and will eat the foliage of almost any kind of plum.
The Butterflies of the British Isles|Richard South
In that plum pudd'ner that got in last week—what's her name?
There She Blows!|William Hussey Macy
That one is the thumb;And this one wants a plum; This one says, “Where do they grow?”
Boys and Girls Bookshelf; a Practical Plan of Character Building, Volume I (of 17)|Various
The parson's wife had sent in a plum pudding, the squire a bottle of old port.
An Old English Home|S. Baring-Gould
British Dictionary definitions for plum (1 of 2)
plum1
/ (plʌm) /
noun
a small rosaceous tree, Prunus domestica, with white flowers and an edible oval fruit that is purple, yellow, or green and contains an oval stoneSee also greengage, damson
the fruit of this tree
a raisin, as used in a cake or pudding
a dark reddish-purple colour
(as adjective)a plum carpet
informal
something of a superior or desirable kind, such as a financial bonus
(as modifier)a plum job
Derived forms of plum
plumlike, adjective
Word Origin for plum
Old English plūme; related to Latin prunum, German Pflaume
British Dictionary definitions for plum (2 of 2)
plum2
/ (plʌm) /
adjective, adverb
a variant spelling of plumb (def. 3), plumb (def. 4), plumb (def. 5), plumb (def. 6)