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be full

VERB
  1. be sated, have enough to eat
    I'm full--don't give me any more beans, please

How To Use be full In A Sentence

  • ‘I only wish farmers could be fully compensated for the incompetence, inefficiency and neglect of the Department over which Mrs Beckett presides,’ he said.
  • We are hoping that the pier will be fully opened within two weeks but some of the rides may take longer to replace.
  • Society may be full of poisonous vapors and be built on a framework of lies; it is nevertheless prudent to consider whether the ideal advantages of disturbing it overweigh the practical disadvantages, and above all to bear in mind that if you rob the average man of his illusions, you are almost sure to rob him of his happiness. Henrik Ibsen
  • What someone from one culture is thinking may not be fully sayable in the language of another culture.
  • The RF Armed Forces and other troops should be fully rearmed by 2020-2025.
  • Twenty years ago all the guesthouses and hotels would be full of holidaymakers - people spending and happy to be there. The Sun
  • These tools should be fully exploited by the nutrition and public health communities to combat micronutrient malnutrition.
  • Still in the end around 16,000 fans went home fed up after a damp squib of a derby that was supposed to be full of fireworks. The Sun
  • He will not be fully wound up yet. The Sun
  • puh" with her mouth, and went out of the house, and never come in again till the King went to Sir Daniel Harvy's to pray her; and so she is come to-day, when one would think his mind should be full of some other cares, having but this morning broken up such a Parliament, with so much discontent, and so many wants upon him, and but yesterday heard such Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1667 N.S.
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