Bountiful, abundant, fruitful, plenteous, lush, overflowing, extravagant, excessive, exuberant, ample, aplenty, and copious
Subservience
plentiful, plenteous
plentiful, plenteous
Yes. Example sentence: There were plentiful, blooming, bright as can be flowers spilling out of the baskets at the market.
Not in modern usage. Plenty is usually a noun, and usually refers to an unspecified number, quantity, or value (plenty of people, plenty of time, plenty of food). *some sources classify "plenty" as a quantifier rather than a noun or adjective *historically the term "plenty" was also used to mean plentiful, which is an adjective
The word abundant, an adjective, can be defined as existing or available in large quantities; plentiful, The word can also mean having plenty of something
An adjective derivative (derivative adjective) is an adjective formed from a noun or verb by the addition of a suffix. Examples: glamor - glamorous honor - honorable plenty - plentiful
Exuberance is an adjective which means effusively and almost uninhibitedly enthusiastic, or abounding in vitality, extremely joyful and vigorous, extremely good, overflowing, plentiful, or superabundant.
"Plentiful" is actually from two roots that mean the same thing - or, if you trace the etymologies back far enough, from the same root twice."Plenti-" is from Latin plenitas, "fullness", which in turn is from the adjective plenus, "full""-ful" is from the native English word "full", which in turn is from the proto-Germanic adjective fullaz.Both plenus and fullaz are derived from the Proto-Indo-European root ple-, "to be full". So etymologically, "plentiful" means "full of fullness".
The 6 letter word for plentiful is Plenty.
The suffix -ful means full of and plenty means alot so the meaning of plentiful is full of plenty .
No, "plentiful" does not have a prefix in it. "Plenty" is the root word, and "ful" is a suffix that means "full of" or "having."