bountiful

IPA: bˈaʊntɪfʌɫ

adjective

  • Having a quantity or amount that is generous or plentiful; ample.
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Examples of "bountiful" in Sentences

  • In general, the early years were more bountiful.
  • The history of the company was about bountifulness.
  • He was advertising the bountifulness of Catholicism.
  • They did not realize the bountifulness of their lives.
  • They were thankful for the bountifulness of the harvest.
  • "bountiful" wind, solar, geothermal and biofuels energy.
  • The bountifulness of joy made the party atmosphere even bountiful.
  • Darby stares at Betty whom only three weeks earlier he had found "bountiful":
  • And they are the Virtues of this kind, namely a bountiful and charitable difpofition to -
  • He kept sevenscore servants, and his twelve days 'feasts at Christmas recalled the bountiful celebrations of the "King of the Peak," Sir
  • Then the vile person would be no more called bountiful, or the churl called liberal: flattery and cringing to the evil great would be at an end.
  • Even more bountiful is the nopal cactus topped with bright pink and yellow blooms growing along the sides of the road and the prickly pear cactus whose fruit is used to make candy.
  • Barron's highlights that, though the Apple relationship may be nearing an end, investors may be overlooking other positives such as bountiful cash flow, 6. 3% dividend yield, other attractive Smartphones, and a solid management team.
  • Never had the corn-growers of England been so thoroughly protected, yet, owing to causes over which the legislators had no control, namely bountiful seasons, the prices of wheat for the next seventy years was from 15 to 20 per cent. cheaper than in the previous forty.

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synonyms for bountiful
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