chock-full [
'tʃɔkfʊl]
a. 塞满了的
- The dustbin is chock-full (of rubbish).
垃圾箱塞满了(垃圾). - The garden is chock-full of beautiful flowers.
花园里满满都是美丽的花朵。 - The Web is chock-full of great information, she said, but most people don't have access to computers.
网络空间充溢大量信息,她说,但是大多数人还没有电脑。
chock-full[ adj ]
packed full to capacity
<adj.all>
chowder chockablock with pieces of fish
Chock-full \Chock"-full`\ chockfull \chock"full`\, pred. a.
Quite full; full to capacity; choke-full; as, chowder
chock-full of clams.
Syn: chockablock(predicate), chockful(predicate),
choke-full(predicate), chuck-full(predicate), cram full.
[1913 Webster + WordNet 1.5]
- Just as prime-time television seems to endlessly reproduce itself, with one season chock-full of detective shows and the next crammed with legal dramas, the ad business can't get enough of a good thing.
- Sixty years ago Central Europe was chock-full of the kind of firms, the Germans call "Mittelstand," that is, successful middle-sized businesses, usually family-owned and family-managed.
- Jim Lord's basement is chock-full of tractor-trailers, moving vans, dump trucks and gasoline tankers. There's so many of them, the traffic jam has spread to his barn.
- The Solt-Wolper product is warm and nostalgic, chock-full of video memory bites almost guaranteed to squeeze tears out of receptive audiences.
- Overwhelmingly, the municipal fund investors have been buying funds chock-full of long-term bonds that mature in 25 to 30 years.
- ROXIE, Miss. (AP) - The mayor of this tiny town is a little embarrassed that makers of Elton John's latest music video chose it as a location site because its streets are chock-full of potholes.