Inundating [verb]

Definition of Inundating:

drown, overwhelm

Synonyms of Inundating:


Opposite/Antonyms of Inundating:


Sentence/Example of Inundating:

Incoming queries from the FBI, Epik and journalists writing about TheDonald’s role in the Capitol attack inundated Williams, for whom moderating the site already had become something of a full-time job.

In the Northwest, dam building during the New Deal inundated the homes, fishing sites and lands of many Indigenous peoples, including the Spokane, Wasco and Colville Nations.

Often, it leads to restaurants, some of which never offered delivery in the first place, being inundated with unexpected orders that might be based on outdated menus, and customers complaining when their orders are canceled.

It’s one thing to address, and another thing to inundate students with this.

Most people on our team are inundated with requests from other teams or other people.

Mayor Steve Widmyer and the City Council were inundated with hundreds of emails and telephone calls, many from mask opponents.

After flipping through choropleth maps from the state’s Health Department, showing the board how the virus was inundating the county, she began to talk about Brooks.

It is enough that the sea rises or falls by a foot, to inundate vast shores, or to restore them to cultivation and plenty.'

Did a flood of emigration inundate the frontier with an amount of consumers disproportioned to the supply of grain?

Her pure serenity revolted against the currents of life sweeping down upon her, threatening to inundate her.