Antonyms for glutted


Grammar : Verb
Spell : gluht
Phonetic Transcription : glÊŒt


Definition of glutted

Origin :
  • 1530s, "a gulp," from glut (v.). Meaning "condition of being full or sated" is 1570s; mercantile sense is first recorded 1590s.
  • verb choke; oversupply
Example sentences :
  • Then, glutted with the feast, he crept away to lick his bruises and recover from the fray.
  • Extract from : « Followers of the Trail » by Zoe Meyer
  • A madness of hate seized on us; we glutted our appetites to the very gorge.
  • Extract from : « John Splendid » by Neil Munro
  • The truth is, I fear, that the market has been glutted and the business overdone.
  • Extract from : « Over the Rocky Mountains to Alaska » by Charles Warren Stoddard
  • Our eyes are ever glutted with the wonders of the sky, and of the lights which are shed around us.
  • Extract from : « In Court and Kampong » by Hugh Clifford
  • It is in the names of Liberty and Brotherhood that the prisons will reek, and the headsman be glutted.
  • Extract from : « Zanoni » by Edward Bulwer Lytton
  • I let none escape: I had them all in their turns, and glutted my thirst for revenge.
  • Extract from : « Frank Mildmay » by Captain Frederick Marryat
  • He was too light for the work, which would have glutted the capacity of a steam shovel.
  • Extract from : « Sixes and Sevens » by O. Henry
  • Would we mind saying if our thirst for vengeance was glutted yet?
  • Extract from : « The Cradle of Mankind » by W.A. Wigram
  • Instead of satisfying a point of honor, it is vengeance to be glutted.
  • Extract from : « Thirty Years' View (Vol. II of 2) » by Thomas Hart Benton
  • The slave-markets of Egypt and Tunis were glutted with Chian captives.
  • Extract from : « History of Modern Europe 1972-1878 » by C. A. Fyffe

Synonyms for glutted

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019