you ate a profuse amount of food, then you took a nap.
(profuse: very abundant; spending or giving freely; lavish; extravagantHe was embarrassed by the profuse praise he received.Weeds become profuse where there is no natural ground cover.He was so profuse in his spending that he is now a pauper.
He is rich, he Profuse Money. This is one of many examples for sentence use.
After much palaver, the decision was finally made to move forward with the project.
There are profution of people in the store.
I am sweating profusely That is a profuse amount of garbage That person ate a profuse amount of food
The root word of "profusely" is "profuse," which comes from the Latin word "profusus," meaning abundant or extravagant.
Plentiful, Plethoric, Profuse, Packed
profuse means excessive
'Profuse' can only be used as an adjective.
"Hemorrhagia" is a word that contains the suffix -rrhagia. It refers to excessive bleeding or a profuse discharge of blood.
The noun forms for the adjective profuse are profuseness and profusion.
The antonym for "profuse" is "minimal" or "scant".