Chockablock


[chok-uh-blok] /ˈtʃɒk əˈblɒk/

adjective
1.
extremely full; crowded; jammed:
a room chockablock with furniture and plants.
2.
Nautical. having the blocks drawn close together, as when the tackle is hauled to the utmost.
adverb
3.
in a crowded manner:
books piled chockablock on the narrow shelf.

adjective

Crammed; crowded full: The plays and stories are chockablock with figures

[1840s+ Nautical; fr a nautical rhyming phrase used to mean that the two blocks of a block and tackle are touching after the device has been tightened to its limit]

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    [chok-uh-blok] /ˈtʃɒk əˈblɒk/ adjective 1. extremely full; crowded; jammed: a room chockablock with furniture and plants. 2. Nautical. having the blocks drawn close together, as when the tackle is hauled to the utmost. adverb 3. in a crowded manner: books piled chockablock on the narrow shelf. adjective, adverb 1. filled to capacity; in a crammed […]

  • Chocked

    [chok] /tʃɒk/ noun 1. a wedge or block of wood, metal, or the like, for filling in a space, holding an object steady, etc. 2. Nautical. 3. Metalworking. a bearing supporting the end of a rolling mill. 4. Mining. a roof support made of cribbing filled with stones. Compare 3 (def 2). verb (used with […]

  • Chocker

    /ˈtʃɒkə/ adjective 1. (informal) full up; packed 2. (Brit, slang) irritated; fed up

  • Chockful

    [chok-foo l, chuhk-] /ˈtʃɒkˈfʊl, ˈtʃʌk-/ adjective 1. full to the limit; crammed. adjective 1. (postpositive) completely full adj. c.1400, chokkeful “crammed full,” possibly from choke “cheek” (see cheek (n.)). Or it may be from Old French choquier “collide, crash, hit” (13c., Modern French choquer), which is probably from Germanic (cf. Middle Dutch schokken; see shock […]

  • Chock-full

    [chok-foo l, chuhk-] /ˈtʃɒkˈfʊl, ˈtʃʌk-/ adjective 1. full to the limit; crammed. adjective 1. (postpositive) completely full adj. c.1400, chokkeful “crammed full,” possibly from choke “cheek” (see cheek (n.)). Or it may be from Old French choquier “collide, crash, hit” (13c., Modern French choquer), which is probably from Germanic (cf. Middle Dutch schokken; see shock […]


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