Use "encumber|encumbered|encumbering|encumbers" in a sentence

1. As verbs the difference between enCumbered and Cumbered is that enCumbered is (encumber) while Cumbered is (cumber).

2. They would interrupt and encumber me.

3. Synonyms: encumbering, freighting, ladening… Antonyms: disBurdening, discharging, disencumbering… Find …

4. She was encumbered with large parcels.

5. As adjectives the difference between enCumbered and Cumbered is that enCumbered is weighted down, loaded sufficiently to make slow while Cumbered is hampered; enCumbered

6. The company encumbered with debts.

7. They can't encumber us on the road.

8. He was encumbered with cares.

9. He is encumbered with debts.

10. I don't want encumber myself with unnecessary luggage.

11. The whole process was encumbered with bureaucracy.

12. I don't want to encumber myself with unnecessary luggage.

13. The business is encumbered with debt.

14. The company is encumbered with debts.

15. The police operation was encumbered by crowds of reporters.

16. Her sentences are encumbered by modifying clauses.

17. The room was encumbered with heavy furniture.

18. 3 I don't want to encumber myself with unnecessary luggage.

19. Her long skirt encumbered her while running.

20. Synonyms: encumbering, freighting, ladening… Antonyms: disBurdening, discharging, disencumbering… Find the right word.

21. What does Accumber mean? (obsolete) To encumber; to crush; to overwhelm

22. The girl's long skirts encumbered her while running.

23. His estate is encumbered with a heavy mortgage.

24. Burdened definition is - carrying a burden : heavily laden or encumbered

25. He died in 18 heavily encumbered by debt.

26. Red tape encumbered all our attempts at action.

27. Zhuofu people: to track grantor , who also encumbered.

28. Why should we encumber them with cultural constraints they do not need?

29. Synonyms for Burdening include loading, encumbering, overwhelming, saddling, straining, trammelling, trammeling, lumbering, weighting and freighting

30. The narrow quay was encumbered by hundreds of carts.

31. How real estate set apart as exempt may be encumbered or Aliened

32. Synonyms: encumbered, freighted, laded… Antonyms: disBurdened, discharged, disencumbered… Find …

33. To be human is merely to encumber the turning of the wheel.

34. He died in 18(Sentence dictionary) heavily encumbered by debt.

35. Accumber, a verb meaning "To encumber." is misspelled in many ways

36. The girl was encumbered with a suitcase and several packages.

37. The rest of the world is less encumbered with legislation.

38. He shall not encumber his brain with the coil of rhythm and number.

39. Neither will the first coach be encumbered by the salary cap.

40. When encumbered with a total of four 21 cm (8 in) Werfer-Granate 21 (Wfr.Gr.

41. One should not encumber oneself with hire purchase repayments at the beginning of a marriage.

42. The Cheapjacks, or surge in before the swift rush of the clanging trams,— pitiful, ugly, mean, encumbering

43. The Cheapjacks, or surge in before the swift rush of the clanging trams,— pitiful, ugly, mean, encumbering

44. Simple past tense and past participle of cumber··(now rare) Hampered; enCumbered

45. Travelling is difficult when you're encumbered with two small children and a heavy suitcase.

46. All these men were encumbered with their heavy loads and had only automatic pistols.

47. Although he ostensibly ran his own business, all of his assets were fully encumbered.

48. Likewise, the oral laws and traditions encumbered the Law and exposed it to corrosive misuse.

49. He was now encumbered with a record that the voters generally regarded in an unfavourable light.

50. How can a system of females choosing males that are good at surviving encumber those males with handicaps to survival?

51. Today, thankfully, women tennis players are not encumbered with/by long, heavy skirts and high-necked blouses.

52. Third, it enables judgement creditors to determine in advance of initiating costly enforcement action whether the grantor’s assets are already encumbered.

53. 23 Environmental hormone disturb the mechanism of internal secretion, make it malajustment, encumber the procreation of organism or bring the malignancy.

54. Alternatively, the credit facility can be contingent: an unused revolving line of credit that can be accessed in an emergency, instantly encumbering the asset.

55. Accable (third-person singular simple present Accables, present participle accabling, simple past and past participle Accabled) ( transitive , obsolete ) To overwhelm ; to encumber

56. The urban renewal administrative process drew considerable criticism because it was so long and encumbered with red tape.

57. The urban renewal administrative process drew considerable criticism because it was so long and encumbered with red tape. Sentencedict.com

58. 2 The urban renewal administrative process drew considerable criticism because it was so long and encumbered with red tape.

59. Accumber (third-person singular simple present Accumbers, present participle Accumbering, simple past and past participle Accumbered) ( obsolete , transitive ) To encumber ; to crush ; to overwhelm .

60. When you score a critical hit using a weapon with the Burdening fusion, the target gains the encumbered condition for 1d4 rounds

61. The protective factory legislation were the outcome of the combination of industrial capitalism and family paternalism, which encumbered the improvement of women's statues.

62. Bemire may be defined as “To drag through, encumber with, or fix in, the mire”, “To soil with mire; dirty or muddy: Bemired clothing” and “To cause (an object or person) to sink in mire: a Bemired wagon ”.

63. The histological diagnosis of dysplasia is still encumbered by a significant interobserver variability, especially regarding the differentiation between low grade dysplasia and inflammatory/reactive changes and the discrimination between high grade dysplasia and adenocarcinoma.

64. The undivided interest in the common elements shall not be separated from the unit to which it Appertains and shall be conveyed or encumbered with the unit even though such interest is not expressly mentioned or described in the conveyance or other instrument

65. Acknowledgments of deeds conveying or encumbering real estate situated in this state, or any interest therein and other instruments in writing, required to be acknowledged, may be taken in any foreign country before any minister, plenipotentiary, secretary of legation, charge d'affaires, consul general, consul, vice consul, consular agent, or commercial agent appointed by the United States

66. Also, that he useth busily to propound, & urge to the utmost such sophisms, as may involve and encumber the Truth; and, as for Assoiling [solving] them, never to attempt it, but rather to leave them in their full strength, that they may stick in the minds of his readers.

67. Burthen: 1 v weight down with a load Synonyms: burden , weight , weight down Antonyms: disburden , unburden take the burden off; remove the burden from Types: overburden load with excessive weight plumb weight with lead saddle load or burden; encumber Type of: charge fill or load to capacity n a variant of `burden' Type of: burden , load ,

68. Burdened: 1 adj bearing a physically heavy weight or load “tree limbs Burdened with ice” Synonyms: heavy-laden , loaded down encumbered loaded to excess or impeded by a heavy load adj bearing a heavy burden of work or difficulties or responsibilities “she always felt Burdened by the load of paper work” Synonyms: bowed down , loaded down ,

69. The chloro‐Arsines employed comprise previously known diazarsolidine 1 a 3a and diazarsolenes 2 a‐b 3 as well as newly synthesized 2 c.NMR spectroscopic studies indicated that reactions of all starting materials with sodium thiocyanate (3), potassium tert‐butyl‐xanthogenate (4) and sterically encumbered sulfhydryl silane 5 proceeded in a similar manner, even if isolation of

70. Cloy (v.) "weary by too much, fill to loathing, surfeit," 1520s, from Middle English Cloyen "hinder movement, encumber" (late 14c.), a shortening of acCloyen (early 14c.), from Old French encloer "to fasten with a nail, grip, grasp," figuratively "to hinder, check, stop, curb," from Late Latin inclavare "drive a nail into a horse's foot when shoeing," from Latin clavus "a nail" (from PIE root