ful

listen to the pronunciation of ful
Turkish - English
completely usually used in combination with an adjective: Ful doluyuz. We're all full up
full house

In poker, what's a full house? - Pokerde Full House nedir?

full-hand
syringa
Arabian jasmine
capacity
full hand
ful olma
full house
English - English
a family of languages of the Fulani people of West Africa and used as a lingua franca in the sub-Saharan regions from Senegal to Chad; the best known of the West African languages
A suffix signifying full of, abounding with; as, boastful, harmful, woeful
(full) (1x) adjective/adverb full, complete, filled, entire, utter, perfectly or (ful) foul, dirty, impure, corrupt, stinking, guilty
(pronounced "fool") is the name for the small-seeded fava bean, the basic culinary bean of Egypt It is the key ingredient in ful medames (also fool mudammas, ful mudammas, fuul medammis, etc ), a traditional bean stew served for breakfast The beans are slow-cooked until tender, mashed and then mixed with olive oil and seasonings, typically lemon juice or cumin
adv: full, very 1, 18, 21, 32, 46
Very, extremely, completely and utterly "Those baatezu Hardheads were ful angry when we gave them the laugh!"
adv very [OE full]
-ful
Used to form nouns from nouns meaning “as much as can be held by what is denoted by the noun”

handful.

-ful
Used to form adjectives from nouns. An adjective derived by this suffix implies a thorough and certain possession of the quality of that noun, not a metaphorical fullness with it by degree or quantity. What is beautiful may be full of beauties, but is first fully beautiful; one who is wakeful is fully awake, not frequently waking; what is changeful is uncertain, not transformed; what is harmful may do a single and a mild injury
Fuller
An occupational surname for a person who fulls cloth
fuller
A convex, rounded or grooved tool, used by blacksmiths for shaping metal
fuller
A groove made by such a tool (in the blade of a sword etc.)
fuller
A person who fulls cloth
fulness
Being full; completeness
fulness
The degree to which a space is full
fulness
: A measure of the degree to which a muscle has increased in size parallel to the axis of its contraction. A full muscle fills more of the space along the part of the body where it is connected
fuller
{n} one who fulls cloth
fulness
{n} a full-state, plenty, extent
Fuller
American architect and inventor who sought to solve practical problems with simple designs that require a minimum of materials and energy. The geodesic dome is his best-known invention. American writer and critic who edited the transcendentalist periodical Dial (1840-1842), was a pioneering literary critic for the New York Tribune (1844-1846), and wrote Woman in the Nineteenth Century (1845), a major feminist tract. Austin Stephen Fuller Fuller John Frederick Charles Fuller Loie Marie Louise Fuller Fuller Sarah Margaret Fuller Melville Weston Fuller Richard Buckminster
Fuller
An English surname derived from the name of a person who fulls cloth
fuller
More full
fuller
United States architect who invented the geodesic dome (1895-1983)
fuller
A groove down the center of a blade, used to both lighten a sword, and conserve sword steel (making a wider blade possible with less material) Often mistakenly called a "Blood Groove "
fuller
A die; a half- round set hammer, used for forming grooves and spreading iron; called also a creaser
fuller
{i} one who fulls fabric; hammer for flattening iron
fuller
To form a groove or channel in, by a fuller or set hammer; as, to fuller a bayonet
fuller
cleans and thickens cloth
fuller
The groove that runs down a sword blade to reduce weight
fuller
a workman who fulls (cleans and thickens) freshly woven cloth for a living
fuller
One whose occupation is to full cloth
fuller
A groove or channel in the flat of the blade designed to lighten the weapon, whilst maintaining it's strength similar to flute
fuller
A groove in a sword blade that reduces its weight
fuller
A hammer used for forming grooves and spreading hot iron under hammer blows
fuller
a workman who fulls (cleans and thickens) freshly woven cloth for a living United States architect who invented the geodesic dome (1895-1983)
fulness
{i} quality of being full or filled to capacity; satiation; completeness; being of large proportions (also fullness)
fulness
The degree to which fate has become known
fulness
A measure of the degree to which a muscle has increased in size parallel to the axis of its contraction. A full muscle fills more of the space along the part of the body where it is connected
ful
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