Replete means full, sated or well satisfied. It is perhaps most often used in the context of food: one might be said to be replete after eating a good meal.
The earth is near replete of natural crude oil which will replete the cars on roads which will replete the happiness of selfish pigs like Dick Cheney.
The buffet was fabulous, it was replete with every treat I could have wanted.
Since the last time we went to the grocery store, which was 2 weeks ago, our stores of food have become very repleted, and it is necessary to get more. Hope that helps! No - the word you should have used above is 'depleted', not 'repleted'! 'My cat was curled up on the bed, smiling smugly and replete with cream and chicken.' 'Fish (fly-replete, in depth of June ... )' (Rupert Brooke)
a definition of a compound word is jack-ass.
It was a classic Christmas dinner, replete with all the traditional trimmings and side dishes.Her term paper was replete with spelling and factual errors.Her parents were replete with worry when she didn't come home last night, but it turned out she had just slept over at a friend's house and forgotten to call home.It wasn't until I saw dozens and dozens of little black specks floating on the surface of the boiling water that I realized the pasta was replete with weevils.Replete with turtle food, the turtle crawled up on her floating dock to bask under her UV heat lamp.The child was replete with wonder at the colossal dinosaur skeletons at the museum.
Full
The subject is still replete with ambiguity and uncertainty.
The earth is near replete of natural crude oil which will replete the cars on roads which will replete the happiness of selfish pigs like Dick Cheney.
The fabulous buffet was replete with every treat I could have wanted. His uniform, replete with medals, was ready for the award presentation.
The buffet was fabulous, it was replete with every treat I could have wanted.
a speech replete with sentimentality
Replete, saturated, stuffed, packed, full.
The streets were replete with onlookers anxious for the parade to begins.
Based on the information in this passage, what is the most likely meaning of the underlined word?
No, "plete" is not a root word in the English language. It is not commonly used as a standalone word but is often seen as a combining form in words like "complete" or "replete."
Since the last time we went to the grocery store, which was 2 weeks ago, our stores of food have become very repleted, and it is necessary to get more. Hope that helps! No - the word you should have used above is 'depleted', not 'repleted'! 'My cat was curled up on the bed, smiling smugly and replete with cream and chicken.' 'Fish (fly-replete, in depth of June ... )' (Rupert Brooke)
The definition of something describes exactly what the word is and how the word can be used. You will also see synonyms for the word and if the word is a noun or adjective when viewing the definition.