Lords of the Car Hoards - 2014 was released on: USA: 17 March 2014
it means an abundance
The OCP or the Ochre Coloured Pottery culture are the most like people responsible for the Copper Hoards, the Ganeshwar-Jodhpura complex may have also played a part in this, albeit that of raw material provider.
If you mean a person that fills their house with worthless junk like on that TV show, the closest word is: pepenador. Un pepenador is garbage-picker, junkman or ragpicker - someone who takes things out of other people's trash for their own use. Of course, there are different kinds of hoarding and pepenador only fits one type. It's not a good translation when you're talking about someone who buys things new and hoards them. Incidentally, to pile up junk is amontonar chatarra.
Wikipedia Definition: Ozwald "Oz" Harmounian is occasionally a triatagonist of the show. Fanboy and Chum Chum think he is "the most knowledgeable human being ever," yet in reality, he is a nerdish know-it-all who lives with his elderly mother. He often says "seriously" as a means of punctuating his opinions. He runs a comic shop called Oz Comix, and he has a vast stock of comics and collectibles, all of which he hoards, and none of which he is willing to sell. He is plump, has a ponytail, a soul patch and wears a black high collared leather jacket. It is not known how old Oz is, but he is quite likely of the age when it is no longer cool to be living with one's mother. Voiced by Josh Duhamel.
A person who hoards is called a hoarder.
A person who saves and hoards money is considered a 'miser.'
I know what you are saying. A person who hoards money is called a miser.
A person who saves and hoards money is considered a 'miser.'
A person who hoards things that you have would be called..."you." Or whatever your name is.
A person who saves money is smart, but a person who hoards money is a classified as a 'hoarder.'
Someone who hoards often brings in garbage and can lead to mice and bugs.
A man how hoards his money tends to have alot of it, he is considered a tight person who can hold on to his money.
Miser
Lords of the Car Hoards - 2014 was released on: USA: 17 March 2014
The right homophone in this sentence is "hoards." The squirrel hoards acorns, meaning it gathers and stores them, so it can eat them during the winter. Hordes, on the other hand, refers to a large group or crowd of people.
That would be a miser.