plethora
121full — [OE] Full and its verbal derivative fill go back ultimately to the Indo European base *plē , which also produced Latin plēnus ‘full’ (source of English plenary, plenty, and replenish, and of French plein and Italian pieno ‘full’) and English… …
122plenty — [13] Plenty is one of a family of English words that trace their history back to Latin plēnus ‘full’ (a descendant of the same Indo European base, *plē , as produced English full and plethora). Others include plenary [16], plenipotentiary [17],… …
123surfeit — I. v. a. 1. Satiate, glut, gorge, sate, overfeed. 2. Cloy, pall, nauseate. II. v. n. Be surfeited, feed to satiety. III. n. 1. Excess. 2. Fulness, oppression, repletion, plethora. 3 …
124pletora — pletóra ž DEFINICIJA 1. velika količina, mnoštvo čega; obilje, bogatstvo, pretek 2. osobina onoga koji je punokrvan; punokrvnost ETIMOLOGIJA nlat. plethora ← grč. plēthṓra: punoća …
125πολυυλία — πολυυλίᾱ , πολυυλία plethora fem nom/voc/acc dual πολυυλίᾱ , πολυυλία plethora fem nom/voc sg (attic doric aeolic) …
126πολυυλίας — πολυυλίᾱς , πολυυλία plethora fem acc pl πολυυλίᾱς , πολυυλία plethora fem gen sg (attic doric aeolic) …
127plethoric — Plethoric, c est à dire Replet, {{t=g}}plêthôrikos{{/t}} cuius corpus redundat humoribus et succis. Plethora plethorae, {{t=g}}plêthora{{/t}} humorum redundantia …
128full — [OE] Full and its verbal derivative fill go back ultimately to the Indo European base *plē , which also produced Latin plēnus ‘full’ (source of English plenary, plenty, and replenish, and of French plein and Italian pieno ‘full’) and English… …