Word of the Day Archive
Monday March 22, 2004

repletion \rih-PLEE-shun\ , noun:
1. The condition of being completely filled or supplied.
2. Excessive fullness, as from overeating.

We have to earn silence, then, to work for it: to make it not an absence but a presence; not emptiness but repletion.
-- Pico Iyer, "The Eloquent Sounds of Silence", Time, January 1993

With distended belly and bursting waistcoat, his eyes glazed with repletion, he picks listlessly at his teeth with a fork.
-- Kenneth Rose, "Madness of King George's son", Daily Telegraph, November 14, 1998

He lay like a filthy leech, exhausted with his repletion.
-- Jeff Guinn, "The Ghoul, the Bad, the Ugly", Arizona Republic, June 7, 1999

Get Word of the Day on your iPhone or iPod touch »


Download the FREE Dictionary.com app

Repletion is derived from Latin replere, "to fill again, to fill up," from re- + plere, " to fill." Plenty is a related word.

Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for repletion

 

AddThis:  AddThis: del.icio.usAddThis: digg.comAddThis: FacebookAddThis: furl.netAddThis: www.netscape.comAddThis: myweb2.search.yahoo.comAddThis: www.stumbleupon.comAddThis: www.google.comAddThis: www.technorati.comAddThis: blinklist.comAddThis: newsvine.comAddThis: ma.gnolia.comAddThis: reddit.comAddThis: favorites.live.com