0 to give someone so much work or so many things that they cannot deal with it all:
2 to bring to a place or person too much of something, so that it cannot be dealt with:
After appearing on TV they were inundated with telephone calls for a week.
We were inundated with complaints when the show had to be canceled.
Floods inundated various Indian communities.
If a scenario resulted in a substantial fraction of land in an island being inundated, land prices would rise.
The total area of this catchment is 3,823 ha of which 272 ha is inundated.
The platform could also be inundated by denial of service attacks.
On hilly sites that are never inundated there are lowland dipterocarp forests.
Not only was the public inundated with information, but manufacturers, dealers, artisans, builders, and architects had to be sold on the programme, as well.
Every factual report, no matter how dressed up in rational language, or inundated with figures and charts, is also part of the performance of publicity.
The benefit of protecting the coastline is the value of the land that would have been inundated.
The producers of all these programmes are inundated with cassette tapes from bands, so they may take some time before listening to them all.