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filled out

/fil/US // fɪl //UK // (fɪl) //

填好的,填好了,填写了,已填好的

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to make full; put as much as can be held into: to fill a jar with water.
    • : to occupy to the full capacity: Water filled the basin. The crowd filled the hall.
    • : to supply to an extreme degree or plentifully: to fill a house with furniture; to fill the heart with joy.
    • : to satisfy fully the hunger of; satiate: The roast beef filled the diners.
    • : to put into a receptacle: to fill sand into a pail.
    • : to be plentiful throughout: Fish filled the rivers.
    • : to extend throughout; pervade completely: The odor filled the room.
    • : to furnish with an occupant: The landlord filled the vacancy yesterday.
    • : to provide with an incumbent: The company is eager to fill the controllership.
    • : to occupy and perform the duties of.
    • : to supply the requirements or contents of, as for goods; execute.
    • : to supply with written matter, decorative work, etc.
    • : to meet satisfactorily, as requirements: This book fills a great need.
    • : to make up, compound, or otherwise provide the contents of.
    • : to stop up or close: to fill a tooth.
    • : Cooking. to insert a filling into: to fill cupcakes with custard.
    • : Nautical. to distend by pressure of the wind so as to impart headway to a vessel.to brace so that the sail will catch the wind on its after side.
    • : to adulterate: to fill soaps with water.
    • : Civil Engineering, Building Trades. to build up the level of with earth, stones, etc.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to become full: The hall filled rapidly. Our eyes filled with tears.
    • : to increase in atmospheric pressure: a filling cyclone.
    • : to become distended, as sails with the wind.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a full supply; enough to satisfy want or desire: to eat one's fill.
    • : an amount of something sufficient for filling; charge.
    • : Civil Engineering, Building Trades. a quantity of earth, stones, etc., for building up the level of an area of ground: These houses were built on fill.Compare backfill.
    • : the feed and water in the digestive tract of a livestock animal, especially that consumed before marketing.
  1. 1
    • : fill away, Nautical. to fall off the wind and proceed on a board.to brace the yards, so that sails that have been aback will stand full.
    • : fill in, to supply missing or desired information: Fill in the facts of your business experience.to complete by adding detail, as a design or drawing: to fill in a sketch with shadow.to substitute for: to fill in for a colleague who is ill.to fill with some material: to fill in a crack with putty.Informal.to supply with information: Please fill me in on the morning news.
    • : fill out, to complete by supplying missing or desired information.to become larger, fuller, or rounder, as the figure: The children have begun to fill out since I saw them last.
    • : fill up, to fill completely: to fill up a glass; to fill up a fuel tank.to become completely filled: The riverbed filled up as a result of the steady rains.

Phrases

  • filled to the brim
  • fill in
  • fill out
  • fill someone's shoes
  • fill the bill
  • back and fill
  • get one's fill of

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • I ate my fill of dulce de leche ice cream with a plastic spoon as it grew cool and viscous at the edges and felt like I’d won a prize.

  • The top of the pad is constructed with 400 thread count 100 percent cotton fabric, and the pad is filled with alternative down fill.

  • It’s made from shredded memory foam that is easily added to, using extra fill to customize the shape and support specific areas.

  • There are also latex fill pillows, which are reasonably firm and will hold their shape.

  • The package even comes with a separate fill bag, so you won’t need to place another order.

  • But politicians abhor a rhetorical vacuum, and they have clamored to fill it.

  • His regular partner was late that day, and Police Officer Wenjian Liu volunteered to fill in.

  • They are afflicted with “progressive spiritual emptiness,” he said, which no amount of academic honors and degrees can fill.

  • It got so bad, that the school resorted to “Groupon-like services” to fill seats.

  • They were allowed to bring one bag per family, which most fill with food.

  • To fill up the time till Liszt came, our hostess made us play, one after the other, beginning with the latest arrival.

  • It was not an exalted niche to fill in life, but at least she had learned to fill it to perfection, and her ambitions were modest.

  • It's good for nothing but to choke a man and fill him full of smoke and embers.

  • “Now this is what I call real felicity,” observed the major, pulling out a pipe which he proceeded to fill.

  • There was a moment's pause, and Doa Inez returned into the saloon, which was now beginning rapidly to fill.