Definition of fullest Fullest

We found 1 definitions of fullest from 1 different sources.

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What does fullest mean?

Part of speech

🔤
  • fullest, adjective, superlative of full.

WordNet

WordNet by Princeton University

Verb

fulls, fulling, fulled  

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"

Adjective

full, fuller, fullest

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
= synonym
= antonym
= related word

Wiktionary Wiktionary dictionary logo

Webster DictionaryWebster's Unabridged Dictionary 📘

  • full (Compar.)
    Filled up, having within its limits all that it can contain; supplied; not empty or vacant; -- said primarily of hollow vessels, and hence of anything else; as, a cup full of water; a house full of people.
  • full (Compar.)
    Abundantly furnished or provided; sufficient in. quantity, quality, or degree; copious; plenteous; ample; adequate; as, a full meal; a full supply; a full voice; a full compensation; a house full of furniture.
  • full (Compar.)
    Not wanting in any essential quality; complete, entire; perfect; adequate; as, a full narrative; a person of full age; a full stop; a full face; the full moon.
  • full (Compar.)
    Sated; surfeited.
  • full (Compar.)
    Having the mind filled with ideas; stocked with knowledge; stored with information.
  • full (Compar.)
    Having the attention, thoughts, etc., absorbed in any matter, and the feelings more or less excited by it, as, to be full of some project.
  • full (Compar.)
    Filled with emotions.
  • full (Compar.)
    Impregnated; made pregnant.
  • full (n.)
    Complete measure; utmost extent; the highest state or degree.
  • full (adv.)
    Quite; to the same degree; without abatement or diminution; with the whole force or effect; thoroughly; completely; exactly; entirely.
  • full (v. i.)
    To become full or wholly illuminated; as, the moon fulls at midnight.
  • full (n.)
    To thicken by moistening, heating, and pressing, as cloth; to mill; to make compact; to scour, cleanse, and thicken in a mill.
  • full (v. i.)
    To become fulled or thickened; as, this material fulls well.

OmegaWiki DictionaryOmegaWiki Dictionary Ω

  • full
    Containing the most or maximum amount possible in the given available space.
  • full
    In tourism when everything is occupied.
  • full
    Having eaten enough.
  • full
    (of color) being chromatically pure; not diluted with white or grey or black.

Chambers DictionaryChamber's 20th Century Dictionary 📕

  • full
    fool, adj. having all it can contain: having no empty space: abundantly supplied or furnished: abounding: containing the whole matter: complete: perfect: strong: clear: (coll.) drunk: at poker, consisting of three of a kind and a pair.—n. completest extent, as of the moon: highest degree: the whole: time of full-moon.—v.t. to draw up or pucker the cloth on one side more than on the other.—adv. quite: to the same degree: with the whole effect: completely.—adjs. Full′-ā′corned (Shak.), full-fed with acorns; Full′-aged, having reached one's majority.—n. Full′-blood, an individual of pure blood.—adjs. Full′-blood′ed; Full′-bloomed, in perfect bloom; Full′-blown, blown or fully expanded, as a flower; Full′-bott′omed, having a full or large bottom, as a wig.—n. Full′-dress, the dress worn on occasions of state or ceremony.—adjs. Full′-eyed, with large prominent eyes; Full′-faced, having a full or broad face; Full′-fed, fed to plumpness; Full′-fraught (Shak.), full-stored; Full′-grown, grown to maturity; Full′-hand′ed, bearing something valuable, as a gift; Full′-heart′ed, full of heart or courage: elated; Full′-hot (Shak.), heated to the utmost; Full′-length, extending the whole length (n. a portrait showing such); Full-manned (Shak.), having a full crew.—ns. Full′-moon, the moon with its whole disc illuminated, when opposite the sun; Full′ness, Ful′ness, the state of being filled so as to have no part vacant: the state of abounding in anything: completeness: satiety: largeness: force and volume, as of sound: (Shak.) plenty, wealth.—adjs. Full′-orbed, having the orb or disc fully illuminated, as the full-moon: round; Full′-sailed, unbounded, absolute: moving onwards under full sail; Full-split (slang), with all one's might or speed; Full′-summed, complete in all its parts.—n. Full′-swing, the full extent or utmost limit.—adj. Full′-winged (Shak.), having perfect or strong wings.—adv. Full′y, completely: entirely.—Full back (football), see Back.—At the full, at the height, as of one's good fortune, &c.; In full, without reduction; In the fullness of time, at the proper or destined time.—To the full, in full measure, completely. [A.S. full; Goth. fulls, Ice. fullr, Ger. voll.]
  • full
    fool, v.t. to press or pound cloth in a mill: to scour and thicken in a mill.—ns. Full′age, the charge for fulling cloth; Full′er, a bleacher or cleanser of cloth; Fuller's-earth, a soft earth or clay, capable of absorbing grease, used in fulling or bleaching cloth; Fuller's-thistle, -weed, the teasel; Full′ery, the place or works where fulling of cloth is carried on; Full′ing-mill, a mill in which woollen cloth is fulled. [O. Fr. fuler—Low L. fullāre—L. fullo, a cloth-fuller.]

Marine DictionaryUniversal Dictionary of the Marine ⚓️

  • full
    AND BY, pres & plein, the situation of a ship with regard to the wind, when she is close-hauled, and sailing in such a manner as neither to steer too nigh the direction of the wind, nor to deviate to leeward; both of which movements are unfavourable to her course, as in the former her sails will shiver, and render the effort of the wind precarious and ineffectual; and in the latter she will advance in a direction widely distant from her real course. Hence, keep her full! defie du vent! is the order from the pilot or other officer to the helmsman, not to incline too much to windward, and thereby shake the sails so as to retard the course.

Sailor's Word-BookThe Sailor's Word-Book

  • full
    The state of the sails when the wind fills them so as to carry the vessel ahead.

Part of speech

🔤
  • full, verb, present, 1st person singular of full (infinitive).
  • full, verb (infinitive).
  • full, noun, singular of fulls.
  • full, adjective.

Pronunciation

Sign Language

fullest in sign language
Sign language - letter F Sign language - letter F Sign language - letter U Sign language - letter U Sign language - letter L Sign language - letter L Sign language - letter L Sign language - letter L Sign language - letter E Sign language - letter E Sign language - letter S Sign language - letter S Sign language - letter T Sign language - letter T

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