different between repletion vs cloyment
repletion
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Old French repletion, from Latin repl?ti?, repl?ti?nem.
Noun
repletion (countable and uncountable, plural repletions)
- The condition of being replete; fullness.
- (medicine, archaic) Plethora of the blood.
Translations
Anagrams
- interlope, interpole, let one rip, petroline, retpoline, terpineol
Old French
Alternative forms
- replecion
- repleciun
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin repl?ti?, repl?ti?nem.
Noun
repletion f (oblique plural repletions, nominative singular repletion, nominative plural repletions)
- repletion (fullness)
- (medicine) overabundance; excess
repletion From the web:
- repletion meaning
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cloyment
English
Etymology
cloy +? -ment?
Noun
cloyment (uncountable)
- (obsolete) satiety
- 1601-02, William Shakespeare, Twelfth Night (act 2 scene 4)
- Alas, their love may be called appetite, no motion of the liver, but the palate, that suffer surfeit, cloyment, and revolt […]
- 1601-02, William Shakespeare, Twelfth Night (act 2 scene 4)
cloyment From the web:
- what does cloying mean
- definition cloying
- what does the word cloying mean
- cloying meaning
- what does cloyingly mean
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