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Like rush-hour roadways
Answer for the clue "Like rush-hour roadways ", 9 letters:
congested
Alternative clues for the word congested
Word definitions for congested in dictionaries
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1570s, "heaped up," past participle adjective from congest . Meaning "overcrowded" is recorded from 1862.
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adjective EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ congested airports ▪ Pedestrians picked their way across congested streets. EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ Elimination: problems may manifest as constipation, fluid retention, congested skin, catarrh. 4. ▪ If drivers paid ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
adj. overfull as with blood [syn: engorged ]
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Congested \Con*gest"ed\, a. (Bot.) Crowded together. --Gray. (Med.) Containing an unnatural accumulation of blood; hyper[ae]mic; -- said of any part of the body.
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
vb. (en-past of: congest )
Usage examples of congested.
Did the ghosts of Levantine girls haunt those cursory checkups, suggested by the fragility of my collarbone, or the birdcall of my small, congested lungs?
In advanced cases the Larnyx is usually much congested, being constantly irritated, not only reflexly through the nervous system, but directly by the inspired air, and excoriating discharges dropping in the throat from behind the palate.
German advance was far to the north, where Von Buelow was profiting by the fall of Kovno, marching on Mitau and Riga, and threatening both to cut the railway between Vilna and Petrograd and confine the Russian retreat to congested and narrow lines of communication along which they could not escape.
The malamutes, since their toes were close together, were all right, but with the huskies the snow had balled and frozen hard, and in biting their paws to release the congested toes they had broken the skin and left raw flesh.
No towns congested its borders, no major transport venues meandered close to its high valley.
Hourly the crowd increased till shoulders touched and elbows, till free circulation became impeded, then congested, then impossible.
Everywhere, all over the world, the historian of the early twentieth century finds the same thing, the flow and rearrangement of human affairs inextricably entangled by the old areas, the old prejudices and a sort of heated irascible stupidity, and everywhere congested nations in inconvenient areas, slopping population and produce into each other, annoying each other with tariffs, and every possible commercial vexation, and threatening each other with navies and armies that grew every year more portentous.
Punch recklessly, and selected what he considered the least congested doorway, and heartily shoved.
Of course each container means more revenue for the congested ports of Long Beach and San Pedro and higher shipping costs paid for consumer goods by the residents of inland Southern California.
His face was congested to a deep shade of heliotrope, but his nostrils were livid with the whiteness of a berserk passion that would have been fuelled rather than assuaged by buckets of human blood.
Char followed other cars as they inched through the congested intersection.
This unique survival stratagem is so successful that their swarms are more congested than that of locusts, penguins, and lemmings combined.
The carriages of ballgoers made the streets almost as congested as they were during the business day, and as he neared the Windsor every available space was occupied by a conveyance.
The ride was as smooth as glass-fiber springs and rubber tires could make it, but the two sweating laborers on the pedals were forced to perform a good many swerves and swift brakings in the congested street.
Instantly, traffic was heavy, sidewalks and streets congested with nurses, dietitians, orderlies, custodians, security guards, administrators, resident doctors and chaplains, all of them worn out, underpaid and cranky.