Fulsome means excessive, extravagant, or overdone.
The word fulsome has several definitions. One definition is to be negatively affected by excess, or to be disgusted by something that has been overdone. A second definition is to be abundant with no negative connotations.
The prefix "ful" means full of or characterized by. It is used to form adjectives that describe something as having a particular quality to the maximum degree.
Some words that contain the root word "onym" are synonym (meaning a word with a similar meaning), antonym (meaning a word with the opposite meaning), and homonym (meaning a word that sounds the same but has a different meaning).
The homophone for select meaning "to choose" is "selekt."
sambandham is the Telugu meaning for relation
It meant then what it means now: copious, abundant, plentiful, in large quantity. In Merchant of Venice, Shylock talks about "fulsome ewes" meaning they were pregnant. In Richard III the ghost of Clarence says he was "washed to death with fulsome wine" meaning an abundance of it.
fulsome: I felt very fulsome As fulsome means offensive, especially being over excessive in flattery and insincerity a sentence using this word could be The lady was embarrassed by the fulsome attention she received from the stranger.
His fulsome admiration was simply disgusting.
Fulsome
Sweet; delicious; very grateful to the taste; toothsome; excessively sweet or rich., Cloying; fulsome., Gratifying a depraved sense; obscene.
fatimamickey
fulsome
The word fulsome has several definitions. One definition is to be negatively affected by excess, or to be disgusted by something that has been overdone. A second definition is to be abundant with no negative connotations.
In modern usage, "fulsome" has two inconsistent meanings. To some people it means "offensive, overdone," so "fulsome praise" to them would be disgustingly exaggerated praise. To other people it means "abundant," and for them "fulsome praise" is glowingly warm praise. The first group tends to look down on the second group, and the second group tends to be baffled by the first. Best to just avoid the word altogether.
You did. (A question is a sentence.)
fortune, fissure, fulsome
offensive to good taste, especially as being excessive; overdone or gross u should've checked dictionary.com