roomful|roomfuls in English
noun
['room·ful || 'ruːfʊl]
amount that a room can hold, amount of material or people that fill one room
Use "roomful|roomfuls" in a sentence
1. A whole roomful of precious stones.
2. a roomful of people/guests/boxes/etc.
3. The whole roomful of boys was dumbfounded.
4. He looked out at a roomful of faces.
5. He announced his resignation to a roomful of reporters.
6. I accumulated a roomful of documents and tape recordings.
7. Its clickety-clack sounded like a "roomful of ladies knitting."
8. He gave an excellent lecture before a roomful of students.
9. Displays suitable for a roomful of people are less advanced.
10. He prepared a one-page test for a roomful of “speed readers.”
11. When Cher Wang enters roomful of people, they struggle to contain their curiosity.
12. Modern computer memories can store more data than a roomful of filing boxes.
13. In a roomful of thin boys one fat boy is odd man out.
14. The boy sits in a roomful of expensive toys, heartbroken, tearful, feeling abandoned.
15. But he did it, right in front of a roomful of people.
16. It is said that working in a roomful of smokers is harmful to nonsmokers.
17. I was a kid managing a roomful of people with five times my experience.
18. In 1955, she starred in Edith Sommer's A Roomful of Roses, staged by Guthrie McClintic.
19. A roomful of mechanical organisms improvising with each other demands a similar local knowledge.Sentence dictionary
20. He stood up before a whole roomful of people, and asked her to marry him.
21. You don't guard a roomful of belt grinders and band saws with a bomb.
22. He stood up before a whole roomful of people, and started to sing loudly.
23. A Roomful of Roses is a fine example of a 1950 s play about personal relationships.
24. Various & introduction by Deirdre Chapman A ROOMFUL OF BIRDS - SCOTTISH SHORT STORIES 1990 (2003) Like the Bargeman …
25. A roomful - they have to hold a meeting to discuss all the ramifications of the change.