0 the fact that something is full --
1 the quality of being complete or containing a lot of detail: --
2 having eaten a lot: --
3 the quality of having a strong flavour, sound, smell, etc.: --
4 the quality of being large or rounded: --
the fullness of her lips
5 the state of having or containing a lot of something: --
Patients have a flat nasal bridge and anteverted nares, wide mouth with fleshy lips, periorbital fullness, flat malar region, small mandible and prominent cheeks.
However, evidence from the depositions suggests that his account was unique only in its fullness.
The fullness of community can never be achieved since identity itself is always already internally divided.
The books are animated by haunting images and uncanny textual conjunctions, as if established scholarly styles are finally inadequate to the fullness of their purposes.
Other features are fullness in the throat, a gurgling noise, halitosis, regurgitation, and aspiration.
How do we get to the fullness of voice-as-knowledge in such documents?
The fact that flowers blossom in spring confers no distinction on you, and the swelling fullness of the autumn harvest is no work of yours.
Instead, they blamed gastric fullness, 'no hunger' or loss of appetite for their poor food intake.