plump 的 3 个定义
plump·er, plump·est.
- well filled out or rounded in form; somewhat fleshy or fat.
- to become plump.
- to make plump: to plump up the sofa pillows.
plump 近义词
chubby, fat
更多plump例句
- Some restaurants in Brooklyn had plantains more plump than the ones at Top Taste.
- They also had to take into account how far into the breeding cycle the penguins were, since earlier in the cycle the birds are plumper from recent foraging, which allows them to start huddling at relatively colder temperatures.
- When a caterpillar hatches, it munches milkweed leaves and grows plump.
- It’s helping to plump their profit margins, and they say it comes down to changes in how consumers are shopping and what they’re buying.
- When fully inflated, a plump, curved, inner mucus house cradles the larvacean as the animal’s swishing tail pumps seawater through the structure.
- Some juice spills out when one is sliced or bitten, but it isn't nearly as plump and oozy as a traditional link.
- There were a couple of black children on one of the floats, and a plump black tuba player marched with the high school band.
- Near its grounds, private gardens hang thick with bright orange tangerines and plump persimmons, the fruits of fall in Abkhazia.
- He wanted purity, docility, absolute devotion to her husband—and plump white arms.
- His skin tone is made to look nearly jaundiced, contrasting with his pale, plump lips.
- She was a plump-faced, insipid child, with fair hair and pale blue eyes, stolid and bovine in their expressionlessness.
- “I thought she wos wery plump, and vell made,” said Mr. Weller, with a critical air.
- The tall oak door of the library was opened by William Weedham himself—a plump, white-haired man with black, overhanging eyebrows.
- But he had not run, and she landed on the further side plump beside him where he sat huddled against the stones.
- It would not be easy to find a more ugly sight than that of their plump, heavy heads and faces in these old-fashioned bonnets.