All inundate synonyms
in·un·date
I i verb inundate
- drown — to die under water or other liquid of suffocation.
- deluge — A deluge of things is a large number of them which arrive or happen at the same time.
- swamp — a tract of wet, spongy land, often having a growth of certain types of trees and other vegetation, but unfit for cultivation.
- flood — a great flowing or overflowing of water, especially over land not usually submerged.
- submerge — to put or sink below the surface of water or any other enveloping medium.
- overflow — to flow or run over, as rivers or water: After the thaw, the river overflows and causes great damage.
- overrun — to rove over (a country, region, etc.); invade; ravage: a time when looting hordes had overrun the province.
- dunk — to dip (a doughnut, cake, etc.) into coffee, milk, or the like, before eating.
- glut — to feed or fill to satiety; sate: to glut the appetite.
- immerse — to plunge into or place under a liquid; dip; sink.
- snow — Sir Charles Percy (C. P. Snow) 1905–80, English novelist and scientist.
- whelm — to submerge; engulf.
- overwhelm — to overcome completely in mind or feeling: overwhelmed by remorse.
- snow under — Meteorology. a precipitation in the form of ice crystals, mainly of intricately branched, hexagonal form and often agglomerated into snowflakes, formed directly from the freezing of the water vapor in the air. Compare ice crystals, snow grains, snow pellets.
- engulf — (of a natural force ) sweep over (something) so as to surround or cover it completely.