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  1. She told him, when he became fulsome, that she didn't want thanks from him, and it was true.

  2. She told him, when he became fulsome, that she didn't want thanks from him, and it was true.

  3. She told him, when he became fulsome, that she didn't want thanks from him, and it was true.

  4. But when I was arrested, he decided not to endanger himself, and he used his treacherous cunning to pretend that he'd never met me before. In the blink of an eye he became a totally different person, and he refused to give me back my own purse, which I had lent to him just half an hour before.

  5. Encouraged by success, he went to Rome, collected rich patrons, and with fulsome flattery won, but failed to keep, the favour of the tyrant Domitian. She told him, when he became fulsome , that she didn't want thanks from him, and it was true.

  6. Dec 11, 1977 · "Why do you say that?" he exclaimed in a passion. "Never let me hear you say that again." "Why, sir," she asked, "what am I to say?" "The rabble, to be sure," answered Swift.

  7. /ˈfʊlsəm/ (disapproving) too generous in praising or thanking somebody, or in saying sorry, so that you do not sound sincere. a fulsome apology. He was fulsome in his praise of the Prime Minister. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. Word Origin. Take your English to the next level.

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