chock-a-block
See also: chockablock and chock a block
English
editPronunciation
editAdjective
editchock-a-block (comparative more chock-a-block, superlative most chock-a-block)
- Alternative spelling of chockablock
- 2019 November 6, Graeme Pickering, “New _targets for Northumberland”, in Rail, page 49:
Adverb
editchock-a-block (comparative more chock-a-block, superlative most chock-a-block)
- Alternative spelling of chockablock
- 1999, Robert Harms, Games Against Nature:
- The first was my experience of motoring, paddling, and poling a dugout canoe through the Equatorial African swamplands that were once inhabited by people who called themselves Nunu and being struck by the astonishing array of micro-environments packed chock-a-block into a region only 40 kilometers long by 20 kilometers wide.
- 2007, Becky Mercuri, The Great American Hot Dog Book, page 128:
- The Piney Creek General Store in Story, Wyoming, is chock-a-block filled with an enormous range of miscellaneous paraphernalia that includes groceries, gourmet cooking ingredients, beer and wine, cast-iron cookware, and kitschy souvenirs and gifts.
- 2007, Don Woodland, Simon Bouda, Picking Up the Pieces:
- One room was chock-a-block full, to the ceiling; you couldn't get into that bedroom.
- 2010, Kevin C. Mills, Sons and Daughters of the Ocean:
- The place is chock-a-block full of old empty bottles on shelves, a collection from around the world.
- 2012, Michèle Roberts, Ignorance, page 218:
- The quay teemed chock-a-block with porters, officials, clumps of overcoated people under umbrellas.
- 2013, Robert Barnard, Death and the Chaste Apprentice:
- I've had a feeling ever since this festival started up that one day I was going to get stuck with a case chock-a-block full of arty people.
References
edit- “chock-a-block”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.