We found 1 definitions of fullest from 1 different sources.
Verb |
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full - beat for the purpose of cleaning and thickening; "full the cloth" | ||
beat come out better in a competition, race, or conflict; "Agassi beat Becker in the tennis championship"; "We beat the competition"; "Harvard defeated Yale in the last football game" | ||
full - make (a garment) fuller by pleating or gathering | ||
modify, alter, change make less severe or harsh or extreme; "please modify this letter to make it more polite"; "he modified his views on same-gender marriage" | ||
full - increase in phase; "the moon is waxing" | ||
wax | ||
wane decrease in phase; "the moon is waning" | ||
increase make bigger or more; "The boss finally increased her salary"; "The university increased the number of students it admitted" | ||
Adjectivefull, fuller, fullest |
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full - containing as much or as many as is possible or normal; "a full glass"; "a sky full of stars"; "a full life"; "the auditorium was full to overflowing" | ||
empty holding or containing nothing; "an empty glass"; "an empty room"; "full of empty seats"; "empty hours" | ||
fullness the property of a sensation that is rich and pleasing; "the music had a fullness that echoed through the hall"; "the cheap wine had no body, no mellowness"; "he was well aware of the richness of his own appearance" | ||
awash, flooded, inundated, overflowing, afloat borne on the water; floating | ||
air-filled full of air | ||
brimful, brimfull, brimming filled to capacity; "a brimful cup"; "I am brimful of chowder"; "a child brimming over with curiosity"; "eyes brimming with tears" | ||
chock-full, chockablock, chockful, choke-full, chuck-full, cram full packed full to capacity; "chowder chockablock with pieces of fish" | ||
congested, engorged overfull as with blood | ||
egg-filled full of eggs | ||
filled (usually followed by `with' or used as a combining form) generously supplied with; "theirs was a house filled with laughter"; "a large hall filled with rows of desks"; "fog-filled air" | ||
fraught, pregnant filled with or attended with; "words fraught with meaning"; "an incident fraught with danger"; "a silence pregnant with suspense" | ||
gas-filled full of a gas | ||
glutted, overfull exceeding demand; "a glutted market" | ||
weighed down, heavy darkened by clouds; "a heavy sky" | ||
instinct, replete (followed by `with')deeply filled or permeated; "imbued with the spirit of the Reformation"; "words instinct with love"; "it is replete with misery" | ||
ladened, laden, loaded burdened psychologically or mentally; "laden with grief"; "oppressed by a sense of failure" | ||
overladen, overloaded loaded past capacity | ||
riddled (often followed by `with') damaged throughout by numerous perforations or holes; "a sweater riddled with moth holes"; "cliffs riddled with caves"; "the bullet-riddled target" | ||
sperm-filled filled with sperm | ||
stuffed filled with something; "a stuffed turkey" | ||
stuffed filled with something; "a stuffed turkey" | ||
untasted, untouched still full; "an untouched cocktail in her hand" | ||
full - (of sound) having marked deepness and body; "full tones"; "a full voice" | ||
thin lacking excess flesh; "you can't be too rich or too thin"; "Yon Cassius has a lean and hungry look"-Shakespeare | ||
stentorian, booming used of the voice | ||
grumbling, rumbling continuous full and low-pitched throbbing sound; "the rumbling rolling sound of thunder" | ||
plangent loud and resounding; "plangent bells"; "the plangent minority" | ||
rich pleasantly full and mellow; "a rich tenor voice" | ||
orotund, pear-shaped, rotund, round (of sounds) full and rich; "orotund tones"; "the rotund and reverberating phrase"; "pear-shaped vowels" | ||
sonorous, heavy darkened by clouds; "a heavy sky" | ||
full - complete in extent or degree and in every particular; "a full game"; "a total eclipse"; "a total disaster" | ||
total | ||
complete having every necessary or normal part or component or step; "a complete meal"; "a complete wardrobe"; "a complete set of the Britannica"; "a complete set of china"; "a complete defeat"; "a complete accounting" | ||
full - having the normally expected amount; "gives full measure"; "gives good measure"; "a good mile from here" | ||
good | ||
full - filled to satisfaction with food or drink; "a full stomach" | ||
replete | ||
full - having ample fabric; "the current taste for wide trousers"; "a full skirt" | ||
wide, wide-cut | ||
ample affording an abundant supply; "had ample food for the party"; "copious provisions"; "food is plentiful"; "a plenteous grape harvest"; "a rich supply" | ||
full - constituting the full quantity or extent; complete; "an entire town devastated by an earthquake"; "gave full attention"; "a total failure" | ||
entire, total | ||
whole including all components without exception; being one unit or constituting the full amount or extent or duration; complete; "gave his whole attention"; "a whole wardrobe for the tropics"; "the whole hog"; "a whole week"; "the baby cried the whole trip home"; "a whole loaf of bread" | ||
full - being at a peak or culminating point; "broad daylight"; "full summer" | ||
broad |