replete


Concise Oxford English Dictionary
replete
rɪ’pli:t
■ adjective
filled or well supplied with something.
very full with food; sated.

repletion noun

ME: from OFr. replet(e) or L. repletus ‘filled up’, past participle of replere, from re- ‘back, again’ + plere ‘fill’.

Concise Oxford Thesaurus
replete
▶ adjective
the guests were replete: WELL FED, sated, satiated, full (up); glutted, gorged; informal stuffed.
a sumptuous environment replete with antiques: FILLED, full, well stocked, well supplied, crammed, packed, jammed, teeming, overflowing, bursting; informal jam-packed, chock-a-block.

EngMac
replete
наполнет, полн

English-Serbian dictionary
Replete
Napunjen-Prepunjen-Pun-Prezasicen-Prepun-Snabdeven

Merriam-Webster Collegiate® Dictionary
re·plete
Pronunciation: ri-‘plēt
Function: adjective
Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French & Latin; Middle French replet, from Latin repletus, past participle of replēre to fill up, from re- + plēre to fill ― more at FULL
Date: 14th century

1 : fully or abundantly provided or filled
2 a : abundantly fed b : FAT, STOUT
3 : COMPLETE
synonyms see FULL
–re·plete·ness noun

replete was last modified: May 5th, 2018 by Jovan Stosic

steer clear of

steer clear of
take care to avoid.
→ headword

Concise Oxford Thesaurus
steer clear of
KEEP AWAY FROM, keep one’s distance from, keep at arm’s length, give a wide berth to, avoid, avoid dealing with, have nothing to do with, shun, eschew.
→ headword

steer clear of was last modified: May 5th, 2018 by Jovan Stosic