[
UK
/fˈʊlnəs/
]
[ US /ˈfʊɫnəs/ ]
[ US /ˈfʊɫnəs/ ]
NOUN
- completeness over a broad scope
- the condition of being filled to capacity
- greatness of volume
-
the property of a sensation that is rich and pleasing
he was well aware of the richness of his own appearance
the cheap wine had no body, no mellowness
the music had a fullness that echoed through the hall
How To Use fullness In A Sentence
- She was older, a yellow-haired journeyman holist almost womanly in the fullness of her body. THE BROKEN GOD
- And even those who'd retired in the fullness of time were no longer secure from retrospective investigation and changed pensionable status. CASCADES - THE DAY OF THE DEAD
- Having access to big portions can override our natural sense of fullness.
- In addition, sensations of fullness, nausea, hunger and other perceptions were measured at baseline and again at 60-minute intervals.
- It is difficult to reconstruct in their fullness the ways of light in bazaars before the appearance of electricity.
- DYSPEPSIA–Also called indigestion, this is an uncomfortable feeling of fullness and bloating after eating. The Most Complete Food Counter, 2nd Edition
- This may cause a brief sensation of fullness, nausea or the need to belch.
- The cheeseboard was sound enough and there were enough little unbidden watermelon vodka shooters and pots of labneh with breadsticks to send me out into the night quite staggering with fullness, even without pudding.
- Apparently, a report commissioned by LC recommends sweeping changes in cataloging procedures, including redefining the "gold standard of quality service" to mean "fast turnaround and delivery of library materials to users ... not the fullness of catalog data. Bad News From the Lilbrary of Congress
- Use a red gloss on your bottom lip to give it fullness.