You searched for: “full
Units related to: “full
(Latin: fill, full)
(Greek: more, most; full; excessive; multiple)
(Greek: moss; blossom; also to swell, teem; young one; to be full, swell, bloom, cause to burst forth)
(Latin: flower; full of flowers, abounding in flowers; flora, plant life, plants of a general region or period)
(Latin: joke, joking, jesting, humorous; cheerful and full of good humor)
(Greek: nastos, pressed close, crammed full; firm, solid)
(Latin: a suffix; full of, disposed to)
(Latin: full of, abounding in, having the qualities of, characteristic of something)
(Latin: full of or having the qualities of; in chemistry, a suffix denoting that the element indicated by the name bearing it, has a valence lower than that denoted by the termination -ic; as, nitrous, sulphurous, etc., as contrasted with nitric, sulphuric, etc.)
(Greek: excess, superabundance, overly full, fullness; increase)
(Latin: complain, complaint, full of complaints; lack of satisfaction; lament, cry of sorrow and grief)
(Greek > Latin: wrinkle, to make full of wrinkles; ridge, fold)
(Latin: impel, goad, sting, spur, incentive, full of incentives)
(Latin: a suffix; tending to do, inclined to; full of)
Word Entries containing the term: “full
A sponge is something that is full of holes but it still can hold water.
This entry is located in the following unit: paraprosdokian, paraprosdokia (page 2)
completely full
This entry is located in the following unit: Pleonasms or Tautological Redundancies (page 5)
full satisfaction
This entry is located in the following unit: Pleonasms or Tautological Redundancies (page 9)
Left bank: What the robber did when his bag was full of loot.
This entry is located in the following unit: paraprosdokian, paraprosdokia (page 4)
totally full
This entry is located in the following unit: Pleonasms or Tautological Redundancies (page 22)
(a radiographic technique that produces an image of a detailed cross section of bodily tissue using a narrow collimated beam of x-rays that rotates in a full arc around a patient to image the body in cross-sectional slices)
Word Entries at Get Words containing the term: “full
full sun
The amount of power density in sunlight received at the earth's surface at noon on a clear day (about 1,000 Watts/square meter).
This entry is located in the following unit: Photovoltaic Conversion Efficiency Terms + (page 9)