Use "profuse" in a sentence

1. His speech was too profuse.

2. The flowers are profuse in spring.

3. He made profuse apologies .

4. The discharge may be quite profuse.

5. He is profuse in hospitality.

6. I loved its profuse blossoms, its heady scent.

7. The old woman was profuse in her thanks.

8. Our profuse apologies go out to both gentlemen.

9. Profuse, clammy sweat; great weakness even to collapse.

10. The diarrhea in young pigs is usually profuse.

11. He was profuse in his thanks for the gift.

12. There were profuse collagenic fibers in the basic substance.

13. It was a mistake. My profuse apologies.

14. The hostess is profuse in her hospitality.

15. Then the policeman recognised me, breaking into profuse apologies.

16. The mourner's profuse tears at the burial were heartbreaking.

17. The sweat is pouring off. This describes profuse sweating.

18. She was admitted to St Mary's Hospital with profuse bleeding.

19. Profuse sweating can increase the need for electrolyte replacement.

20. The company accepted blame and sent us profuse apologies.

21. Cranesbill controls profuse bleeding by promoting blood clotting

22. Many hybrids are profuse and persistent with flowers.

23. 27 Profuse sweating is one of the symptoms of heat exhaustion.

24. Her head was covered with a profuse mass of curls.

25. Profuse amounts of grey and ginger hair sprouted from nose and ears.

26. Hybrid strains of Alstroemeria have become extremely popular commercial cut flowers (profuse

27. The response was profuse: more gold, silver, copper, iron, and precious stones.

28. He has a soft, dense undercoat with a profuse harsh - textured outer coat.

29. The Catmint plant has profuse lavender blooms on spiky stems alongside soft, crinkled, gray-green leaves

30. Boundless: See: continual , far reaching , indefinite , indeterminate , infinite , innumerable , myriad , open-ended , perpetual , profuse , unlimited , unqualified

31. 11 Profuse bleeding, orthostatic dizziness, syncope, and postural pulse and blood pressure changes may occur.

32. The following day, Moira telephoned the Daily Telegraph with profuse apologies for the misunderstanding.

33. As an adjective Copious is great in quantity or number, profuse, abundant; taking place on a large scale

34. Synonyms for Copious include lavish, profuse, abundant, ample, bounteous, bountiful, considerable, extensive, full and galore

35. Profuse oral bleeding can result from trauma, aneurysm rupture, or tonsillectomy and needs prompt care.

36. Links to more information Cholera Cholera is an acute bacterial infection that presents as profuse, watery diarrhea.

37. The namaskara - mandapa has profuse wood - carvings , while the wall of the shrine has interesting mural paintings .

38. English words for Abundante include abundant, plenty, plentiful, hearty, generous, ample, bountiful, profuse, lavish and rife

39. 13 Dizziness, anxiety, syncope, and anorexia have also been reported as well as profuse tearing and photophobia.

40. THE BIBLE: WHAT IT IS CHARLES BRADLAUGH One or two friends whose professions had Beforetime been profuse, Eleanor met

41. Young PCs had profuse Arborizations vertically approaching the pial surface, while old PC Arborizations appeared significantly atrophied in the

42. Spice Up Your Garden! Beginning gardeners like Coreopsis because these profuse bloomers are simple to grow and require little maintenance

43. These are profuse perspiration, which is to be found in acrodynia and secondly the pronounced pinkish color of the fingers and toes.

44. The Barbet’s skin is thick and his coat profuse, both of which serve as protection when the dog is swimming in icy waters.

45. The coats of many puppies may be less profuse than that of adults, and so grooming will be more straight forward.

46. Synonyms for Brimming with include heavy, abounding in, abundant in, lavish with, generous with, full of, liberal with, profuse with, bursting with and extravagant with

47. Chrysanthemum 'Bolero' Adding brilliance in the late season garden, Chrysanthemum 'Bolero' is a hardy garden mom featuring profuse sprays of large, up to 3.5 in

48. In his review for " The New Yorker ", James Wood wrote, Mandanipour s writing is exuberant, Bonhomous, clever, profuse with puns and literary-political references

49. An acute infectious disease of the small intestine, caused by the bacterium Vibrio Cholerae and characterized by profuse watery diarrhea, vomiting, muscle cramps, severe dehydration, and depletion of electrolytes

50. Annuals, because they bloom the same year from seed planted in the spring, offer the quickest and most profuse color in a garden, and actually take the least care …

51. Noun Backslapper (plural Backslappers) One who makes a show of liking another person with profuse or excessive displays of camaraderie, such as vigorous hand clasping, back-slapping, hearty words of greeting, etc

52. The hallmark of Cholera is profuse watery diarrhea to such an extent that a person can lose up to one liter of water an hour in the stool.

53. We have come to adore this Allium for its numerous virtues: attractive, shiny deep green foliage, profuse display of bright rose-pink flowered globes, vigorous growth rate, and excellent deer and rabbit resistance

54. One of the most ornamental Burnets, Sanguisorba albiflora (White-Flowered Burnet) is a compact, clump-forming perennial with profuse and attractive fluffy, white, bottlebrush flowers, elegantly swaying in the breeze in summer

55. Abutilon (Flowering Maples) can be evergreen or deciduous shrubs, small trees, perennials or annuals, bearing profuse and showy, lantern-like flowers from spring to frost (often year-round in frost free areas).

56. Brahmas are gentle giants with feathered legs and feet and profuse, fluffy feathering. Originally from India, these birds were bred for meat production, though the hens lay relatively decently and are great setters and mothers.

57. Aster amellus 'King George' (Italian Asters) Among the first Asters to bloom, Aster amellus 'King George' (Italian Aster) is regarded as one of the best with its profuse and long lasting show of star-shaped, violet-blue blossoms, up to 2 in

58. ‘The article expresses a horror at the 'Barbarity' of the 'unmeaning mummeries, dishonest debt, profuse waste, and bad example in an utter oblivion of responsibility'.’ ‘According to Wong, the aestheticization of Chinese history makes it palatable, along with reinforcing the Orientalist binary opposition between eastern Barbarity and

59. ‘As in many Renaissance Antiphonaries, the prominence of the large historiated initial T and the profuse border decoration have reduced the text to a few verses.’ ‘In 1980 Daniel Wildenstein enriched the museum with his father's extraordinary collection of illuminations: 228 mediaeval miniatures taken from Antiphonaries, missals and books

60. Backslapper: One who makes a show of liking another person with <xref>profuse</xref> or <xref>excessive</xref> displays of <xref>camaraderie</xref>, such as vigorous hand clasping, back-slapping, hearty words of greeting, etc.

61. When they had heard the emperor's letter, the Aediles were excused from so anxious a task, and that luxury of the table which from the close of the war ended at Actium to the armed revolution in which Servius Galba rose to empire, had been practised with profuse expenditure, gradually went out of fashion.

62. When it comes to year-round beauty, it's hard to beat Amelanchier canadensis, and when it comes to Amelanchier, it's even harder to beat Spring Glory!It combines everything that's so beloved about this native tree: profuse spring bloom, sweet fruit, glorious fall color, and adds in a dwarf, compact habit that greatly expands the ways in which it can be used in the landscape or garden.

63. I was once, I remember, called to a patient who had received a violent contusion in his tibia, by which the exterior Cutis was lacerated, so that there was a profuse sanguinary discharge […; 1883: Alfred Swaine Taylor, Thomas Stevenson, The principles and practice of medical jurisprudence The Cutis measures in thickness from a quarter of a line to a line and a half (a line is one-twelfth of