adjective adjective: plump; comparative adjective: plumper; superlative adjective: plumpest
1. having a full rounded shape.
"the berries were plump and sweet"
synonyms: chubby, fat, stout, rotund, well padded, ample, full-figured, pillowy, round, chunky, portly, overweight, fleshy, paunchy, bulky, corpulent; More rarepulvinate;
informaltubby, roly-poly, pudgy, beefy, porky, zaftig, corn-fed
"a plump child"
antonyms: thin
verb
verb: plump; 3rd person present: plumps; past tense: plumped; past participle: plumped; gerund or present participle: plumping
1.
shake or pat (a cushion or pillow) to adjust its stuffing and make it rounded and
dose it mean when you plummer things and it is just a nother thing to say meaning you can say anything but i still don't no that much about
it so
SORRY! :-(
The collective noun plump is used for a plump of ducks (in flight), a plump of geese (on water), a plump of waterfowl, a plump of wildfowl, a plump of moorhens, and a plump of woodcocks.
Plump is a good word, or if you really want to hit it out of the park, unconditionally plumpish. To continue the posh theme: Plump for a lady and portly for a gentleman
the stem buh of the Anglo saxon word bugen meaning to bow plus the suffix som or sum meaning like produced buhsum by about 1175 with the meaning of humble or obedient or capable of being bent the meaning then gradually progresssed from compliant & obliging thru lively & jolly to healthily plump & vigorous to plump & comely by 1589 as the spelling also progressed thru buxum to buxom
drop, flutter, plump
A plump of moorhens
Plump; fat; sleek.
The collective noun plump is used for a plump of ducks (in flight), a plump of geese (on water), a plump of waterfowl, a plump of wildfowl, a plump of moorhens, and a plump of woodcocks.
Plump is a good word, or if you really want to hit it out of the park, unconditionally plumpish. To continue the posh theme: Plump for a lady and portly for a gentleman
A sentence for plump is, I saw a plump boy at the shops,:)
Bobby Plump's birth name is Bobby Gene Plump.
No, plump is an adjective (plump, plumper, plumpest) and a verb (plump, plumps, plumping, plumped). Nouns are words people, places, and things. Adjectives describe people, places, and things. Examples:The plump apples looked juicy.Marie would plump the cushions on to the couch.
Plump only has one syllable.
One man looked plump next to his thin friend.I had to plump my pillow to be comfortable.
the stem buh of the Anglo saxon word bugen meaning to bow plus the suffix som or sum meaning like produced buhsum by about 1175 with the meaning of humble or obedient or capable of being bent the meaning then gradually progresssed from compliant & obliging thru lively & jolly to healthily plump & vigorous to plump & comely by 1589 as the spelling also progressed thru buxum to buxom
The duration of Plump Fiction is 1.37 hours.
The turkey was plump, which was just what they were looking for to feed everyone. He had put on a bit of weight and looked plump now.
Plump Fiction was created on 1998-05-15.