full

full - adjective

  • Containing as much or as many as is possible or normal
  • Complete especially in detail, number, or duration
  • Lacking restraint, check, or qualification
  • Having all distinguishing characteristics : enjoying all authorized rights and privileges
Source: Merriam-Webster Dictionary API
"a full hamper"

Usage examples

Examples: "I can see the full from here." "That full belongs to me." "The full is very important."

SpellingJoy score for full

SpellingJoy Gematria

🎓 Scholar
101

Letter Values

F
9
U
21
L
13
L
15

Etymology

Middle English ful, full, fol, going back to Old English full, going back to Germanic *fulla- (whence also Old Frisian ful, fol "full," Old Saxon full, Middle Dutch vol, Old High German fol, Old Icelandic fullr, Gothic fulls), going back to Indo-European {it}*pl̥h{inf}1{/inf}nó-,{/it} verbal adjective from the base {it}*pleh{inf}1{/inf}-{/it} "become full," whence also Old Irish lán "full," Welsh llawn (with length secondary if the proposed law shortening pretonic vowels in Celtic is valid), Latin plēnus (with -ē- from -plēre "to fill"), Old Church Slavic plĭnŭ, Russian pólnyj, Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian pȕn, Lithuanian pìlnas, Sanskrit pūrṇáḥ, Avestan pərəna-; {it}*pleh{inf}1{/inf}-{/it} appears with varying ablaut and suffixation in Latin plēre "to fill" (from *plēi̯e-), verbal adjective plētus, Greek pímplēmi "(I) fill," plêto "(it) has become full," Armenian lnowm "(I) fill," Sanskrit pr̥ṇā́ti "(s/he) fills"