No, if someone uses the term "fuller" to mean having more quantity than something comparable, they are using slang, rather than any official vocabulary.
HOWEVER, there is a word 'fuller' in the Oxford English Dictionary and other dictionaries to mean a 'ditch' orsink in the blade ofa sword to enable better flex in it and/or make it require less metal to forge/manufacture.
cup is oat
Risible is another word for sense of humor. It means provoke laughter.
Infatuation is a false sense of love.
Another word would be perception.
Senseful, senseless and sensual are adjective of the noun sense.
No, it is a slang word. Not a word in the dictionary to describe something that is Full.A fuller is another word for a blood groove on a bayonet.
The issue with the adjective "full" is that it already denotes an extreme state; such states cannot be made comparative or superlative in a normal sense. Other examples might include "perfect," "unique," etc.
fuller
A Fuller was a Launderer. They washed garments and used certain items to make the whites, white. The word "Fuller is used in Mark 9:3 in the KJV.
The compound word for "cup" is "teacup."
Gikombe is the Kikuyu word for the English word cup.
In Spanish, the word "vaso" means glass or cup, not "vase." It can refer to any type of container used to drink from.
the Spanish word for cup is la taza.
Comparative degree for the word 'full' is fuller Superlative for the same is fullest.
I guess it would be "sense".
The English word sense translates in to the Luhya word maana.
The base word of "sensible" is "sense."