shroom
English
Alternative forms
- 'shroom (especially in “mushroom” sense)
Etymology
Clipping of mushroom.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ʃɹuːm/
Audio (General Australian): (file) - Rhymes: -uːm
Noun
shroom (plural shrooms)
- (slang, usually in the plural) A magic mushroom: a hallucinogenic fungus.
- 2009, Sean Williams, Jesus and the Magic Mushroom, Lulu.com, →ISBN, page 33:
- Dosage: The typical amount of beginner “shroom” dosage ranges from 1.5 grams of dried shrooms for a mild experience, to 3.5 grams for an intense experience.
- (informal, rare) Any mushroom.
- 2000, Karen Brooks et al., Dude Food: Recipes for the Modern Guy[1], Chronicle Books, →ISBN, page 83:
- These succulent little shrooms from pop culture scholar Lena Lencek will drive everyone back for seconds.
- 2003, Dave Hirschkop, Crazy from the heat: Dave’s insanity cookbook[2], Ten Speed Press, →ISBN, page 72:
- Shrooms—and I don’t mean the psychedelic kind—are one of those vegetables that you either love or hate.
- 2004, Jim Sterba, Frankie’s Place: A Love Story[3], Grove Press, →ISBN, page 172:
- To determine how much live protein may be occupying a shroom, try this test: […].
Translations
hallucinogenic fungus — see magic mushroom
any mushroom — see mushroom
Verb
shroom (third-person singular simple present shrooms, present participle shrooming, simple past and past participle shroomed)
- (intransitive, slang) To take magic mushrooms.
- 2012, Michael E. Monahan, College Boy, AuthorHouse, →ISBN, page 23:
- Not just because it was sophmoric[sic] and juvenile (which it surely was) but I was shrooming pretty heavily by now.
- 2014, Mohsin Hamid, Discontent and Its Civilizations: Dispatches from Lahore, New York and London, Penguin UK, →ISBN:
- Just a few months ago I was in Amsterdam with two old friends from the Lahore art world. On a warm summer night we checked out some galleries and walked along the canals, whirring bicycles and shrooming teenagers passing us in the darkness.