fulth

Etymology
From, ; equivalent to. Compare and 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1)  Fullness; abundance; plenty.
 * 2)  Fill; sufficiency; repletion; satiety.
 * 3) * 1853, Michael Theakston, A List of Natural Flies that are Taken by Trout, Grayling, & Smelt, in the Streams of Ripon, W. Harrison (publ.), page 62.
 * "en"
 * 1)  Fill; sufficiency; repletion; satiety.
 * 2) * 1853, Michael Theakston, A List of Natural Flies that are Taken by Trout, Grayling, & Smelt, in the Streams of Ripon, W. Harrison (publ.), page 62.
 * "en"
 * "en"

- When the weather is genial, at the times of hatching and coming on the water of these two flies, the trout generally take their fulth of them in preference to all others, when the natural flies only can succeed; but if rude, westling weather then prevails, it gives good imitations a chance.


 * 1) * 1853, Michael Theakston, A List of Natural Flies that are Taken by Trout, Grayling, & Smelt, in the Streams of Ripon, W. Harrison (publ.), page 73.
 * "en"

- T HE stars of the spring are fading, but their splendour remains iu [sic] the trout! Fat and capricious, the gilded monarch selects his fulth from the good things that surround him.