0 to cover a surface, or to fill a place with things that are not tidy or well organized -- zagracać
[ often passive ] Every shelf is cluttered with ornaments.
1 a lot of objects that are not tidy or well organized -- bałagan
There's too much clutter on my desk.
Our first example illustrates how the logical definitions of functions might be cluttered for the purpose of deriving nice algebraic properties.
Local traffic increased enormously, crowding our old streets, cluttering and destroying the splendour of the monumental squares.
Now the system becomes more and more complicated, looking rather cluttered.
The workspace is cluttered with no obstacles (represented by spheres) to be avoided by the robot segments.
Ideally, one person should be responsible for notice boards so that out-of-date notices are not cluttering the board and interest is maintained.
The negative move seems purer, less cluttered with implication and unnecessary presence, yet is inconceivable without drawing the other in its train.
The result is, in our opinion, at least a linguistic improvement; the theory is no longer cluttered by the syntactic idiosyncracies of lists.
The guilds highly cluttered space/aerial insectivores, highly cluttered space/gleaning insectivores, and highly cluttered/gleaning nectarivores, had no canopy species.