Drum.

A crowded evening party, a contraction of “drawing-room” (drʹ-ʹoom). Cominges, the French ambassador, writing to Louis XIV., calls these assemblies drerums and driwromes. (See Rout, Hurricane.)

“The Comte de Broglie … goes sometimes to the drerums, and sometimes to the driwrome of the Princess of Wales.”—Nineteenth Century: Comte de Cominges: Sept., 1891, p. 461.


“It is impossible to live in a drum.”—Lady M. W. Montagu.

John Drum’s entertainment. Turning an unwelcome guest out of doors. The allusion is to drumming a soldier out of a regiment.

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

Drop off (To)
Drop Serene (gutta serena)
Drown the Miller (To)
Drowned Rat
Drowned in a Butt of Malmsey
Drowning Men
Drows
Drub, Drubbing
Drug
Druid
Drum
Drum Ecclesiastic
Drum-head Court-martial
Drummers
Drummond Light
Drumsticks
Drunk
Drunkard’s Cloak (A)
Drunken Deddington
Drunkenness
Drunkenness

Linking here:

Hurricane
Kettledrum
Rout (A)