different between repletion vs fulth

repletion

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Old French repletion, from Latin repl?ti?, repl?ti?nem.

Noun

repletion (countable and uncountable, plural repletions)

  1. The condition of being replete; fullness.
  2. (medicine, archaic) Plethora of the blood.

Translations

Anagrams

  • interlope, interpole, let one rip, petroline, retpoline, terpineol

Old French

Alternative forms

  • replecion
  • repleciun

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin repl?ti?, repl?ti?nem.

Noun

repletion f (oblique plural repletions, nominative singular repletion, nominative plural repletions)

  1. repletion (fullness)
  2. (medicine) overabundance; excess

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fulth

English

Alternative forms

  • fouth

Etymology

From Middle English fulth, fulthe, from Old English fylleþ (fullness, in compounds), from Proto-Germanic *fulliþ? (fullness), from Proto-Indo-European *pel?-, *pl?- (to fill); equivalent to full +? -th. Cognate with Middle High German vüllede (fullness).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /f?l?/

Noun

fulth (uncountable)

  1. (Britain dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) Fullness; abundance; plenty.
    • 1910, Thomas Hardy, "A Singer Asleep".
    • 1911, John Payne (tr.), The Poetical Works of Heinrich Heine: Now First Completely Rendered Into English Verse, in Accordance with the Original Forms, Volume 3, page 134.
    • 1952, Yorkshire Dialect Society, Summer Bulletin, page 18.
  2. (Britain dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) Fill; sufficiency; repletion; satiety.
    • 1641, Henry Best, Rural Economy in Yorkshire in 1641: Being the Farming and Account Books of Henry Best, of Elmswell, in the East Riding of the County of York, in The Publications of the Surtees Society, publ. by George Andrews, 1857, pages 4 & 5.
    • 1853, Michael Theakston, A List of Natural Flies that are Taken by Trout, Grayling, & Smelt, in the Streams of Ripon, W. Harrison (publ.), page 62.
    • 1853, Michael Theakston, A List of Natural Flies that are Taken by Trout, Grayling, & Smelt, in the Streams of Ripon, W. Harrison (publ.), page 73.
    • 1924, Yorkshire Dialect Society, Transactions of the Yorkshire Dialect Society, page 41.

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