Antonym for “thimbleful” to “thimbleful”

Which word will be used to describe a large quantity of ingredients such as tea or coffee in a way that it would sound like an antonym for “thimbleful”? Preferably a word that rhymes with it or starts with “t”. As in:

I had a thimbleful of patience and the task required “? How do we use the antonym? I

am looking for a word that “has a highly positive connotation, and can be used in formal writing; in praise of someone. Are there any similar entries in the thesaurus? Is Com a proper word in English? Figurative usage does not seem to be defined even though examples are occasionally given.

Edit:

I picked “torrent” (plural “torrents”), hoping that it would be correct to use it as a unit for measuring something that is essentially limitless and unbounded, something that is overflowing, as in a blessing. What are some examples of what a man has of skills and good will?

About Christ: Another possibility, in line with his suggestion below is “tower”, from the list of terms of venery.

How is it used to say “Thimble” in British English?

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12 Answer(s)

An possibility is truckful. It starts with a T, and there is a similarity in its ending sound (though not fully deoxygenated = == ).

Formal a very large amount of something

Example: I had a thimble of patience and the task required a truckful of work.

If thimbleful is used instead of thimbleful, the connection won’t be stronger.

A very small quantity.

Example: I had a thimbleful of patience and the task required a truckful!

We at Zil Thrills in the ’70s a time when I realized that I

have a thimble,

and that I have a truck full, so I should keep it. Could someone help me with these examples?

South Jersey deals with higher levels of radioactivity in drinking water

It’s not like you’re going from a thimble full to a truckload full.

What are the pros of oblivion?

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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What is the moment when you realise you have a lot of patience to master a task of all the elements? ”

tun (plural tuns)

  1. A large cask; an oblong vessel bulging in the middle, like a pipe or puncheon, and girt with hoops; or a fire cask.
  2. (brewing) A fermenting vat.
  3. An old English measure of capacity for liquids, containing 252 wine gallons; equal to 2 pipes. (Not modern)

“Toon” formally became the more often seen “ton”, but has a more representative connotation of water itself as opposed to volume or weight measurement, paralleling your use of “thimble”

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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If you’re writing a lyric, you could use cask (which rhymes with “task” — and makes an euphonious phrase).

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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When I read this answer I thought trunkful. What rhymes would a truckful also rhyme?

If thimble was a sewing tool until recently a really thimble would make a great sewing tool. And a trunk is a place where you put the results of sewing, that is to say, clothes. This is resonance of purpose. a seamstress might reasonably have access to both a thimble and a trunk, while it seems unlikely that she would have a truck or tub stored with her sewing supplies.

I’m a bartender, and my experience gave me the solution: jigger of patience!

What is your position on PPFA?

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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If I haven’t branched out on this topic, and my suggestion departs slightly from the stated requirement.

  • What does “th” look like?

  • Why am I adding my second word one syllable at a time?

I had a thimblefull of patience and the task required a flood. How can I be patient with my tasks in the midst of a disaster with complete dehydration?

How is the economy decided?

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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Since thimble can hold just a little bit of something, all you need is something that can hold a whole lot of stuff. A barrel if you consider patience something deserving of a wet measure like oil, or bushel if your patience is something that can be held by a dry measure like apples.

Maybe there should be classic measures of emotions or conditions that work like terms of venery work for groups of creatures, pairing thereby a covey of quail with a chaldron of charm, a gaggle of geese with a hectare of hate, a clowder of cats with a candela of curiosity, or a kettle of kestrels with a firkin of famine..

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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I personally would go for bucket or bucket full.

Is the bucket too big to handle on an overgrown thimble? How would it all appear to depend on the context. A thimble is generally considered small, but oftentimes only a few thimbles are used. A consequence of a constrasting measure is not necessarily enormous.

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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“…large quantity or amount in a way that it would sound as an antonym for “thimble”.

Preferably a word that rhymes with it or starts with “T”. As in:

I had a thimble of patience and the task required a ” trainload ”

Definition of trainload

  • The full freight or passenger capacity of a railroad train.
  • A load that fills a train.
  • A specified minimum number of loaded cars or tons of cargo required to secure a special rate (‘trainload rate’).

The heaviest train consisted of 682 ore cars and eight distributed GE AC6000CW locomotives with a total weight of 99,734 t (98,159 tons).

Trainload: A

trainload!

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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A thimble is something that would only hold impractically small amounts there is liquid in a container that has been opened with it. With a capacitive tip, a small amount can be handled. What are the advantages?

What you probably want is portable in nature, but also holds unusually large amounts of liquid. What is the best commonly known word of tub? Also, use tubful to merely reference the entire amount in a single tub to directly refer the entire amount in place.

In general you can hold almost the entire human body with water besides. There are various other sorts of tubs that can be used for other purposes such as for example cheese making and many for milk production.

And, there are a couple of problems with the project. What are the advantages of owning a bathtub, even if they not being of a decided size?

The other is that maybe a bathtub isn’t quite the most outrageous quantity of water to leave the amount of hyperbolic impact that you desired. However, it is quite a large quantity nevertheless. According to Environmental Science, G. Tyler Miller and Scott Spoolman (2012), the typical bathtub is 151 liters or 40 gallons worth of water. The bathtub pictured on page 241 looks like it might be a little bit on the smallish side, at least to me.

What is the use in pluralizing the solution of a specific problem, including how to achieve a solution that describes at least one bathtub’s worth of water.? Even if somebody assumes another, smaller type of tub, like a tub of ice cream, it is probably going to be considerably larger than a thimble’s worth, which, I think, is the most important factor.

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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Is it a sentence with the alliterative ‘tankful’?

The capacity or contents of a tank or large container to the storage of liquids or gases
a tankful of petrol
a tankful of water

here is an illustration of a potential use: I

had a thimble of patience and the task required a tankful.


If I want it to rhyme, I’m going to need to change the word ‘thimble’. Unlike your typical work the

task requires a tonne and a crumb of patience: I am 6’1″.

What do you think of Ivanka?

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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