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All glut synonyms

glut
G g

verb glut

  • choke β€” When you choke or when something chokes you, you cannot breathe properly or get enough air into your lungs.
  • load β€” anything put in or on something for conveyance or transportation; freight; cargo: The truck carried a load of watermelons.
  • clog β€” When something clogs a hole or place, it blocks it so that nothing can pass through.
  • surfeit β€” excess; an excessive amount: a surfeit of speechmaking.
  • overwhelm β€” to overcome completely in mind or feeling: overwhelmed by remorse.
  • jade β€” James' DSSSL Engine
  • pall β€” a cloth, often of velvet, for spreading over a coffin, bier, or tomb.
  • cloy β€” to make weary or cause weariness through an excess of something initially pleasurable or sweet
  • fill β€” to make full; put as much as can be held into: to fill a jar with water.
  • hog β€” a hoofed mammal of the family Suidae, order Artiodactyla, comprising boars and swine.
  • overload β€” to load to excess; overburden: Don't overload the raft or it will sink.
  • flood β€” a great flowing or overflowing of water, especially over land not usually submerged.
  • sate β€” to cause to sit; seat (often followed by down): Sit yourself down. He sat me near him.
  • cram β€” If you cram things or people into a container or place, you put them into it, although there is hardly enough room for them.
  • satiate β€” to supply with anything to excess, so as to disgust or weary; surfeit.
  • congest β€” to crowd or become crowded to excess; overfill
  • devour β€” If a person or animal devours something, they eat it quickly and eagerly.
  • burden β€” If you describe a problem or a responsibility as a burden, you mean that it causes someone a lot of difficulty, worry, or hard work.
  • gorge β€” to swallow, especially greedily.
  • overstock β€” to stock to excess: We are overstocked on this item.
  • inundate β€” to flood; cover or overspread with water; deluge.
  • deluge β€” A deluge of things is a large number of them which arrive or happen at the same time.
  • saturate β€” to cause (a substance) to unite with the greatest possible amount of another substance, through solution, chemical combination, or the like.
  • feast β€” any rich or abundant meal: The steak dinner was a feast.
  • stuff β€” the material of which anything is made: a hard, crystalline stuff.
  • wolf β€” any of several large carnivorous mammals of the genus Canis, of the dog family Canidae, especially C. lupus, usually hunting in packs, formerly common throughout the Northern Hemisphere but now chiefly restricted to the more unpopulated parts of its range.
  • pack β€” a group of things wrapped or tied together for easy handling or carrying; a bundle, especially one to be carried on the back of an animal or a person: a mule pack; a hiker's pack.
  • overfeed β€” give too much food to
  • raven β€” a lyric poem (1845) by Edgar Allan Poe.
  • swamp β€” a tract of wet, spongy land, often having a growth of certain types of trees and other vegetation, but unfit for cultivation.

noun glut

  • excess β€” An amount of something that is more than necessary, permitted, or desirable.
  • surplus β€” something that remains above what is used or needed.
  • superfluity β€” the state of being superfluous.
  • overabundance β€” an excessive amount or abundance; surfeit: an overabundance of sugar in the diet.
  • accumulation β€” An accumulation of something is a large number of things which have been collected together or acquired over a period of time.
  • oversupply β€” an excessive supply.
  • saturation β€” the act or process of saturating.
  • nimiety β€” excess; overabundance: nimiety of mere niceties in conversation.
  • plenitude β€” fullness or adequacy in quantity, measure, or degree; abundance: a plenitude of food, air, and sunlight.
  • too much β€” an excess of
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