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Crowded - 4 dictionary results

crowd⋅ed

[krou-did]
–adjective
1. filled to excess; packed.
2. filled with a crowd: crowded streets.
3. uncomfortably close together: crowded passengers on a bus.

Origin:
1605–15; crowd 1 + -ed 2
Language Translation for : Crowded
Spanish: abarrotado, atestado, concurrido, German: überfüllt, Japanese: 込みあった
crowd 1     (kroud)  Pronunciation Key 
n.  
  1. A large number of persons gathered together; a throng.
  2. The common people; the populace.
  3. A group of people united by a common characteristic, as age, interest, or vocation: the over-30 crowd.
  4. A group of people attending a public function; an audience: The play drew a small but appreciative crowd.
  5. A large number of things positioned or considered together.
v.   crowd·ed, crowd·ing, crowds

v.   intr.
  1. To congregate in a restricted area; throng: The children crowded around the TV.
  2. To advance by pressing or shoving: A bevy of reporters crowded toward the candidate.
v.   tr.
  1. To force by or as if by pressing or shoving: Police crowded the spectators back to the viewing stand. Urban sprawl crowded the farmers out of the valley.
  2. To draw or stand near to: The batter crowded the plate.
  3. To press, cram, or force tightly together: crowded the clothes into the closet.
  4. To fill or occupy to overflowing: Books crowded the shelves.
  5. Informal To put pressure on, as to pay a debt.

[From Middle English crowden, to crowd, press, from Old English crūdan, to hasten, press.]
crowd'er n.
Synonyms: These nouns denote a large group of people gathered close to one another: a crowd of well-wishers; a crush of autograph seekers; a flock of schoolchildren; a horde of demonstrators; a mob of hard-rock enthusiasts; a press of shoppers; throngs of tourists.

crowd·ed     (krou'dĭd)  Pronunciation Key 
adj.  
  1. Filled near or to capacity: a crowded bus.
  2. Filled with a crowd: a crowded plaza.
  3. Filled to such an extent as to be detrimental to the inhabitants: "By the mid-1800s children were being transported on 'orphan trains' from crowded eastern slums and institutions to the West" (Mary-Lou Weisman).
crowd'ed'ness n.
crowded

adjective
overfilled or compacted or concentrated; "a crowded theater"; "a crowded program"; "crowded trains"; "a young mother's crowded days" [ant: uncrowded

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