Word Meanings - TEEMING - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Prolific; productive. Teeming buds and cheerful appear. Dryden.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of TEEMING)
- Abundant
- Plentiful
- copious
- plenteous
- large
- ample
- overflowing
- teeming
- full
- lavish
- luxuriant
- bountiful
- abounding
- profuse
- liberal
- rich
- Fertile
- Rich
- productive
- exuberant
- causative
- conducive
- pregnant
- fraught
- prolific
- fecund
- fruitful
- ingenious
- inventive
- Fraught
- charged
- Multiplication
- Multiplicity
- plurality
- multitudinousness
- multifariousness
- multitude
- repetition
- reiter ation
- reproduction
- augmentation
- swarming
- Pregnant
- Procreant
- generative
- significant
- replete
- with child
- enceinte
Possible antonyms: (opposite words of TEEMING)
Related words: (words related to TEEMING)
- CHILDSHIP
The state or relation of being a child. - OVERFLOWINGLY
In great abundance; exuberantly. Boyle. - INVENTIVE
Able and apt to invent; quick at contrivance; ready at expedients; as, an inventive head or genius. Dryden. -- In*vent"ive*ly, adv. -- In*vent"ive*ness, n. - STORER
One who lays up or forms a store. - INGENIOUSNESS
The quality or state of being ingenious; ingenuity. - CHILDISHNESS
The state or quality of being childish; simplicity; harmlessness; weakness of intellect. - CHARGEANT
Burdensome; troublesome. Chaucer. - LAVISHNESS
The quality or state of being lavish. - PLENTIFUL
1. Containing plenty; copious; abundant; ample; as, a plentiful harvest; a plentiful supply of water. 2. Yielding abundance; prolific; fruitful. If it be a long winter, it is commonly a more plentiful year. Bacon. 3. Lavish; profuse; prodigal. - CAUSATIVE
1. Effective, as a cause or agent; causing. Causative in nature of a number of effects. Bacon. 2. Expressing a cause or reason; causal; as, the ablative is a causative case. - CHILDED
Furnished with a child. - CHILDBIRTH
The act of bringing forth a child; travail; labor. Jer. Taylor. - LAVISHER
One who lavishes. - ACCUMULATE
To heap up in a mass; to pile up; to collect or bring together; to amass; as, to accumulate a sum of money. Syn. -- To collect; pile up; store; amass; gather; aggregate; heap together; hoard. - LIBERALIZE
To make liberal; to free from narrow views or prejudices. To open and to liberalize the mind. Burke. - TREASURER
One who has the care of a treasure or treasure or treasury; an officer who receives the public money arising from taxes and duties, or other sources of revenue, takes charge of the same, and disburses it upon orders made by the proper authority; - BOUNTIFUL
1. Free in giving; liberal in bestowing gifts and favors. God, the bountiful Author of our being. Locke. 2. Plentiful; abundant; as, a bountiful supply of food. Syn. -- Liberal; munificent; generous; bounteous. -- Boun"ti*ful*ly, adv. - REITERATE
To repeat again and again; to say or do repeatedly; sometimes, to repeat. That with reiterated crimes he might Heap on himself damnation. Milton. You never spoke what did become you less Than this; which to reiterate were sin. Shak. Syn. - PREGNANT
1. Being with young, as a female; having conceived; great with young; breeding; teeming; gravid; preparing to bring forth. 2. Heavy with important contents, significance, or issue; full of consequence or results; weighty; as, pregnant replies. - RETAINMENT
The act of retaining; retention. Dr. H. More. - COLLINEATION
The act of aiming at, or directing in a line with, a fixed object. Johnson. - ATTENUATION
1. The act or process of making slender, or the state of being slender; emaciation. 2. The act of attenuating; the act of making thin or less dense, or of rarefying, as fluids or gases. 3. The process of weakening in intensity; diminution - INDIGNATION
1. The feeling excited by that which is unworthy, base, or disgraceful; anger mingled with contempt, disgust, or abhorrence. Shak. Indignation expresses a strong and elevated disapprobation of mind, which is also inspired by something flagitious - MIGRATION
The act of migrating. - DISPLANTATION
The act of displanting; removal; displacement. Sir W. Raleigh. - FALCATION
The state of being falcate; a bend in the form of a sickle. Sir T. Browne. - TESTIFICATION
The act of testifying, or giving testimony or evidence; as, a direct testification of our homage to God. South. - NATATION
The act of floating on the water; swimming. Sir T. Browne. - FLUXATION
The act of fluxing. - SUMMATION
The act of summing, or forming a sum, or total amount; also, an aggregate. Of this series no summation is possible to a finite intellect. De Quincey. - DILUCIDATION
The act of making clear. Boyle. - COLONIZATION
Tha act of colonizing, or the state of being colonized; the formation of a colony or colonies. The wide continent of America invited colonization. Bancroft. - ELICITATION
The act of eliciting. Abp. Bramhall. - FLOSSIFICATION
A flowering; florification. Craig. - VARIOLATION
Inoculation with smallpox. - GRAVIDATION
Gravidity.