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plenitudea full supply Of course at that season, amid the plenitude of seeds, nuts, and berries, they were as plump as partridges. — Reid, Mayne
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plenitudeearly 15c., from Old French plenitude and directly from Latin plenitudinem (nominative plenitudo) "abundance, completeness, fullness," from plenus "complete, full" (see plenary).
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plenituden. Abundance.
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plenitude(n) a full supply
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plenitudeplenitude|lang=en
*1962 — Therefore, only that which comprehends and possesses the whole plenitude of endless life together, from which no future thing nor any past thing is absent ... — B [..]
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