Thesaurus / most swamped
FEEDBACKsynonyms for most swamped
synonyms for most swamped
- active
- unavailable
- working
- buried
- employed
- engaged
- engrossed
- hustling
- occupied
- overloaded
- persevering
- slaving
- snowed
- swamped
- already taken
- assiduous
- at it
- diligent
- having a full plate
- having enough on one's plate
- having fish to fry
- having many irons in the fire
- in a meeting
- in conference
- industrious
- in someone else's possession
- in the field
- in the laboratory
- on assignment
- on duty
- on the go
- tied-up
- up to one's ears
- with a customer
antonyms for most swamped
MOST RELEVANT
Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
How to use most swamped in a sentence
The wave caused by the explosion swamped the submarine and it and its crew found a watery grave.
THE WONDER BOOK OF KNOWLEDGEVARIOUSThe waves ran high and the boats were in great danger of being swamped.
YOUNG GLORY AND THE SPANISH CRUISERWALTER FENTON MOTTHe had been down into the bottom-most pit of hell, and the sights that he had seen there had withered him up.
LOVE'S PILGRIMAGEUPTON SINCLAIRI thought we were swamped as I clung desperately to the tiller, though thrown violently against the boom.
FAMOUS ADVENTURES AND PRISON ESCAPES OF THE CIVIL WARVARIOUSHe might have been swamped by an uprising of the whole convention, but strange to say the convention was intent upon hearing him.
A HOOSIER CHRONICLEMEREDITH NICHOLSONHad our craft been a dug-out boat, as I originally intended it to be, we must inevitably have been swamped.
THE ADVENTURES OF LOUIS DE ROUGEMONTLOUIS DE ROUGEMONTSwamped as he was by hurt egotism, he did not fail to observe the peculiarity of her attitude.
HAPPY HOUSEBETSEY RIDDLE, FREIFRAU VON HUTTEN ZUM STOLZENBERGHow entirely by his own strong effort had he swamped his legal expectations!
HEARTMARTIN FARQUHAR TUPPERIf he tries to swim alongside he is unnoticed; if he swims in the wake he is swamped.
DAISY ASHFORD: HER BOOKDAISY ASHFORDSome were swamped at once, the men hardly escaping with their lives.
BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE, VOLUME 54, NO. 334, AUGUST 1843VARIOUS