filling
noun
- process of adding contents and making full
- fulfill, satisfy
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈfɪlɪŋ/ / [ˈfɪɫɪŋ]
adj
- Of food, that satisfies the appetite by filling the stomach.
“a filling meal”
“We had oatmeal porridge for breakfast, which was fairly filling, but I always starved at lunch and dinner. My friend continually reasoned with me to eat meat, but I always pleaded my vow and then remained silent.”
noun
- Anything that is used to fill something.
- The contents of a pie, etc.
- Any material used to fill a cavity in a tooth or the result of using such material.
“I will be using a rapid-setting cement filling.”
“My temporary filling fell out and got lost.”
- The woof in woven fabrics.
- Prepared wort added to ale to cleanse it.
- A religious experience attributed to the Holy Ghost "filling" a believer.
“1903, William Edward Biederwolf, A Help to the Study of the Holy Spirit, James H. Earle & Company (publ.), page 100. As learned Dr. Hodge has reminded us, any impartation of the Holy Spirit is a baptism, and certainly, apart from biblical phraseology, a filling with the Spirit may be called a baptism with the Spirit.”
“All these terms referencing the work of the Holy Spirit—coming upon, falling upon, being filled with the Holy Spirit, receiving the promise of the Father—can best be understood as synonymous with baptism in the Holy Spirit, with the key to understanding being “one baptism, many fillings.””
verb
- present participle and gerund of fill