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  1. Dictionary
    crowded
    /ˈkraʊdɪd/

    adjective

    • 1. (of a space) full of people, leaving little or no room for movement; packed: "a very crowded room"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. CROWDED | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary. Meaning of crowded in English. crowded. adjective. uk / ˈkraʊ.dɪd / us / ˈkraʊ.dɪd / Add to word list. A2. If a place is crowded, it is full of people: By ten o'clock the bar was crowded. Fewer examples. As Christmas gets closer, the shops get more and more crowded.

  3. Crowded definition: filled to excess; packed.. See examples of CROWDED used in a sentence.

  4. CROWD definition: 1. a large group of people who have come together: 2. a group of friends or a group of people with…. Learn more.

  5. : filled with many or too many people or things. a crowded room/theater. a beach crowded with people. a crowded itinerary. Synonyms. brimful. brimming. bursting. chock-full. chockful. chockablock. crammed. fat. filled. full. jam-packed. jammed. loaded. packed. stuffed. See all Synonyms & Antonyms in Thesaurus.

  6. If your timetable, your life, or your mind is crowded, it is full of events, activities, or thoughts. Never before has a summit had such a crowded agenda. ...a long life crowded with incident.

  7. adjective. uk / ˈkraʊdɪd / us. Add to word list. A2. very full of people: a crowded room / train. Fewer examples. The room was very crowded - there was nowhere to sit. We met in a crowded bar. Our eyes met across a crowded room. The city centre was crowded and noisy. She pushed her way through the crowded market place.

  8. adjective. /ˈkraʊdɪd/ having a lot of people or too many people. We made our way through the crowded streets. a crowded bar. The main beach can get really crowded in summer. London was very crowded. crowded with somebody In the spring the place is crowded with skiers. compare uncrowded. Extra Examples. Oxford Collocations Dictionary.

  9. 1. a. : to press on : hurry. The ships crowded northward. b. : to press close. The players crowded around the coach. 2. : to collect in numbers. Police officers warned people not to crowd. transitive verb. 1. a. : to fill by pressing or thronging together. crowd a room. b.

  10. adjective. overfilled or compacted or concentrated. “a crowded theater” “a crowded program” “ crowded trains” “a young mother's crowded days” synonyms: huddled. crowded or massed together. jam-packed, jammed, packed. filled to capacity. thronged. filled with great numbers crowded together. see more. Pronunciation. US. /ˈkraʊdɪd/ UK. /ˈkraʊdɪd/

  11. 1. Filled near or to capacity: a crowded bus. 2. Filled with a crowd: a crowded plaza. 3. Having insufficient space for comfort: "When wealthy Dutch settlers began feeling crowded in lower Manhattan, they moved to verdant farmlands north of the city" ( Janet Groene ). crowd′ed′ness n.