Abundant House

I am curious as to whether abundant in is a more correct usage than abundant with? For example, the sentence: "The mail room is abundant in letters" seems to have the same meaning when compared to...

Opinion: Abundant implies much or many of something. Sufficient implies what is necessary for something to occur. My personal experience: graduate student and then research scientist since 1988 - ecology and crop research.

abundant house 2

1 Abundant, considerable or extensive would fit. Depending on the nuance you are looking for you might want wide-ranging or indepth. But there are a lot of possiblities This thesaurus suggests 169 synonyms including ample experience, long-standing experience, significant expertise. The list goes on!

abundant house 3

I would suggest abundant. existing or available in large quantities; plentiful. As you can see, the definition from Oxford Dictionaries shows that abundant encompasses what you want to say in one word. It is applicable to "things" like potatoes and gives the impression that they are found everywhere.

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'Riding a gravy train' idiom means getting a job or other source of income that generates abundant money with little effort. However, what is the origin of this phrase and why it makes sense at all...

abundant house 5

The free dictionary provides two definitions for "rich with" and "rich in". rich with: having a lot of something; abundant in something rich in: having valuable resources, characteristics, traditi...

abundant house 6

Although native speakers usually find it easy to decide how many syllables are present in a given word or utterance, although syllable-based writing systems have been in use for thousands of years and although speech errors provide abundant evidence for the mental reality of syllables, the syllable has proved exceedingly difficult to define.