FAT vs WEIGHTY: NOUN
- Any of various soft, solid, or semisolid organic compounds constituting the esters of glycerol and fatty acids and their associated organic groups.
- The ester of glycerol and one, two, or three fatty acids.
- A kind of body tissue containing stored fat that serves as a source of energy; adipose tissue also cushions and insulates vital organs
- A solidified animal or vegetable oil.
- A mixture of such compounds occurring widely in organic tissue, especially in the adipose tissue of animals and in the seeds, nuts, and fruits of plants.
- Animal tissue containing such substances.
- Obesity; corpulence.
- Unnecessary excess.
- A soft greasy substance occurring in organic tissue and consisting of a mixture of lipids (mostly triglycerides)
- A large open vessel for water, wine, or other liquids; a tub; a cistern: now usually vat (which see).
- A dry measure, generally equal to 9 bushels.
- A local Australian term for fat or marketable cattle.
- A white or yellowish oily solid substance forming the chief part of the adipose tissue of animals, and also found in plants.
- The best or richest part of a thing.
- In type-setting, work which for any reason is unusually profitable to the compositor. See fat work, above.
- A large tub, cistern, or vessel; a vat.
- A measure of quantity, differing for different commodities.
- Excess bodily weight
- N/A
FAT vs WEIGHTY: ADJECTIVE
- Having much flesh (especially fat)
- Marked by great fruitfulness
- Containing or composed of fat
- Puffed up; swollen.
- Thick; large.
- Prosperous; wealthy.
- Yielding profit or plenty; lucrative or rewarding.
- Having an abundance or amplitude; well-stocked.
- Fertile or productive; rich.
- Abounding in desirable elements.
- Full of fat or oil; greasy.
- Having much or too much fat or flesh; plump or obese.
- Fleshy; characterized by fatness; plump; corpulent; not lean.
- Exhibiting the qualities of a fat animal; coarse; heavy; gross; dull; stupid.
- Fertile; productive
- Rich; producing a large income; desirable
- Abounding with fat.
- Oily; greasy; unctuous; rich; -- said of food.
- Lucrative
- Having a relatively large diameter
- A chubby body
- Rigorous; severe; afflictive.
- Burdensome; oppressive: : burdensome.
- Of great consequence; serious or momentous.
- Having great power or influence.
- Having weight; heavy; ponderous; as, a weighty body.
- Powerfully persuasive
- Excessively fat
- Weighing heavily on the spirit; causing anxiety or worry
- Of great gravity or crucial import; requiring serious thought
- Having considerable weight; heavy. : heavy.
- Having weight; heavy; ponderous.
- Adapted to turn the balance in the mind, or to convince; important; forcible; serious; momentous.
- Having relatively great weight; heavy
FAT vs WEIGHTY: VERB
- Make fat or plump
- N/A
FAT vs WEIGHTY: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To grow fat, plump, and fleshy.
- N/A
FAT vs WEIGHTY: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To make fat; fatten.
- To become fat; grow fat.
- In leather-manuf, to smear over with a heavy oil.
- In painting, rich; full of color.
- Having much flesh other than muscle; having an unusual amount of flesh; corpulent; obese: as, a fat man; a fat ox.
- Containing the substance called fat (see II.); containing or consisting of fat, oil, or grease; oily; greasy; unctuous: as, a fat dish; fat cheese.
- Hence Containing much resin; resinous: as, fat pine.
- Containing much plastic or unctuous matter; pinguid: said of clay which is free from intermingled sand, and consequently highly plastic; or of lime made from limestone which contains but a small amount (ten per cent. or less) of the ordinary impurities of limestone — silica, alumina, oxid of iron, etc.
- Having or showing, in mind or movement, the qualities of a fat animal; heavy; dull; stupid.
- Well supplied with what is needful or desired; abounding in comforts; prosperous.
- Abundant in production, or yielding large profits; rich in results or yield; profitable.
- Nautical, broad, as the quarter of a ship.
- Having an (over)abundance of flesh
- (idiom) (fat chance) Very little or no chance.
- (idiom) (the fat is in the fire) Bad consequences are sure to follow; trouble lies ahead.
- (idiom) (a fat lot) Very little or none at all.
- (transitive; intransitive verb) To make or become fat; fatten.
- Having considerable weight; heavy; ponderous.
- Burdensome; hard to bear.
- Weighing heavily on the spirit
- Requiring serious thought
- Of great gravity or crucial import
- Heavy
- Having relatively great weight
- Severe; rigorous; afflictive.
- Authoritative; influential; important.
- Grave or serious in aspect or purport.
- Adapted to affect the judgment or to convince; forcible; cogent.
- Important; serious; momentous; grave.
- Causing anxiety or worry
FAT vs WEIGHTY: RELATED WORDS
- Greasy, Pudgy, Corpulent, Sebaceous, Blubber, Tubby, Podgy, Overweight, Plump, Adipose tissue, Obese, Chubby, Fatty tissue, Adipose, Fatty
- Unwieldy, Momentous, Ponderous, Of import, Telling, Obese, Fat, Grave, Rotund, Grievous, Corpulent, Forceful, Important, Heavy, Cogent
FAT vs WEIGHTY: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Greasy, Pudgy, Corpulent, Sebaceous, Blubber, Tubby, Podgy, Overweight, Plump, Adipose tissue, Obese, Chubby, Fatty tissue, Adipose, Fatty
- Unwieldy, Momentous, Ponderous, Of import, Telling, Obese, Fat, Grave, Rotund, Grievous, Corpulent, Forceful, Important, Heavy, Cogent
FAT vs WEIGHTY: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Most of the fat in cream cheese is saturated fat.
- VOLUME of fat, but different body fat PERCENTAGE.
- It literally locks the fat in your fat cells.
- How should I declare fat and calories from fat?
- Fat Loss And Muscle Building Workout Program Generator Fat Loss Bands Best Converting Weight Loss Product High Quality Book Fat Loss By Inches!
- Consuming too much fat can not only limit the amount of fat your body burns but increase your fat stores as well.
- This is a combination of two different types of fat: essential body fat and storage fat.
- Recall that the Nutrition Facts label is only required to show total fat, saturated fat, and fat.
- Total body fat includes two types of fat: essential body fat and storage body fat.
- Upton says there are several different types of fat, including brown fat, beige fat, white fat, visceral fat, and subcutaneous fat.
- PC, and its weighty action plays surprisingly on!
- Most of those books were weighty Puritan works.
- The foregoing developments seem weighty enough on paper.
- Nothing can ever alter those four weighty aggravatingcircumstances.
- As such, it serves a weighty public end.
- Precedent is weighty in the Nigerian legal system.
- The dissenters include weighty figures in both parties.
- Many other weighty matters will also be raised.
- Books about the Clash are typically weighty affairs.
- Although my words were never so weighty, they could not be weighty enough to fitly describe your momentous peril!
FAT vs WEIGHTY: QUESTIONS
- Does dietary fat restriction result in more body fat loss?
- Does extreme liquid fat burner really work to burn fat?
- What makes the Les fat different from other fat bikes?
- How is fat digestion and absorption related to fat metabolism?
- Are fat-soluble vitamins more bioavailable when you eat fat?
- Which is better for you trans fat or polyunsaturated fat?
- Is it safe to replace saturated fat with polyunsaturated fat?
- Does chlorogenic acid alter body fat in high-fat diet?
- Does belly fat correlate with abdominal visceral fat?
- Is polyunsaturated fat better for you than saturated fat?
- When did the weighty burden crossword puzzle last be last solved?
- How do you use the word weighty and powerful in a sentence?
- What makes the AR-15 combat rifle folding Sight set so weighty?
- Does the bridge fail to support its weighty premise?