The issue with the adjective "full" is that it already denotes an extreme state; such states cannot be made comparative or superlative in a normal sense. Other examples might include "perfect," "unique," etc.
A Fuller was a Launderer. They washed garments and used certain items to make the whites, white. The word "Fuller is used in Mark 9:3 in the KJV.
No, it is a slang word. Not a word in the dictionary to describe something that is Full.A fuller is another word for a blood groove on a bayonet.
The word for a glass in Italian is "bicchiere." It is commonly used to refer to a drinking glass. In a broader context, "vetro" refers to glass as a material.
No, if someone uses the term "fuller" to mean having more quantity than something comparable, they are using slang, rather than any official vocabulary. HOWEVER, there is a word 'fuller' in the Oxford English Dictionary and other dictionaries to mean a 'ditch' orsink in the blade ofa sword to enable better flex in it and/or make it require less metal to forge/manufacture.
fuller
shiny, clear
The homograph for a glass container is "jar." This word can refer to both a glass container used for storing food or a mason jar used for canning.
Technically vitrification, though that word also has other meanings than specifically a liquid becoming a glass.
possessive form of the word glass: glass'
The homonym for "glass" is "glass." In this case, the word is both a noun referring to a transparent material used for windows, containers, and other objects, as well as a verb meaning to look at or observe something. The context in which the word is used determines its meaning, making it a homonym.
The line is : the word ; Equal
The word shard is used in relation to something broken, such as glass or ceramic. A sentence with the word shards in it could be, there were shards of glass everywhere when the mirror fell to the ground.