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INUNDATE |
Overwhelm |
|
ENGULF |
Overwhelm |
|
BOGGLE |
Overwhelm |
|
CRUSH |
Overwhelm |
|
|
DROWN |
Overwhelm |
|
TROUNCE |
Overwhelm |
|
ROUT |
Overwhelm |
|
HELL |
To overwhelm. |
|
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OVERWHELMED |
Of Overwhelm |
|
OVERWHELMING |
Of Overwhelm |
|
DEAFEN |
Overwhelm with sound |
|
DELUGE |
To overflow with water; to inundate; to overwhelm. |
|
INDRENCH |
To overwhelm with water; to drench; to drown. |
|
OVERPRESS |
To bear upon with irresistible force; to crush; to
overwhelm. |
|
SWAMP |
Fig.: To plunge into difficulties and perils; to
overwhelm; to ruin; to wreck. |
|
AMAZE |
To confound, as by fear, wonder, extreme surprise; to
overwhelm with wonder; to astound; to astonish greatly. |
|
OVERLAY |
To lay, or spread, something over or across; hence, to
cover; to overwhelm; to press excessively upon. |
|
INGULF |
To swallow up or overwhelm in, or as in, a gulf; to cast
into a gulf. See Engulf. |
|
VITUPERATE |
To find fault with; to scold; to overwhelm with
wordy abuse; to censure severely or abusively; to rate. |
|
CONFUTE |
To overwhelm by argument; to refute conclusively; to
prove or show to be false or defective; to overcome; to silence. |
|
OVERFLOW |
To flow over; to cover woth, or as with, water or
other fluid; to spread over; to inundate; to overwhelm. |
|
ABSORB |
To swallow up; to engulf; to overwhelm; to cause to
disappear as if by swallowing up; to use up; to include. |
|
WHELM |
To cover with water or other fluid; to cover by immersion
in something that envelops on all sides; to overwhelm; to ingulf. |
|
FLUSH |
To cause to be full; to flood; to overflow; to overwhelm
with water; as, to flush the meadows; to flood for the purpose of
cleaning; as, to flush a sewer. |
|
QUENCH |
To extinguish; to overwhelm; to make an end of; -- said
of flame and fire, of things burning, and figuratively of sensations
and emotions; as, ... |