chuck-full

Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.

Entirely full. Common in familiar language as well as chock-full, which see for other examples.


[At dinner] the sole labor of the attendants was to keep the plates chuck-full of something.

Carlton, The New Purchase, Vol. I. p. 181.

I'll throw that in, to make chuck-full the "measure of the country's glory."

Crocket, Tour, p. 86.

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