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  1. Dictionary
    crowd·ed
    /ˈkroudəd/

    adjective

    • 1. (of a space) full of people, leaving little or no room for movement; packed: "a very crowded room"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. A2. If a place is crowded, it is full of people: By ten o'clock the bar was crowded. Fewer examples. As Christmas gets closer, the shops get more and more crowded. Chen gave her a nod of recognition across the crowded room.

  3. The meaning of CROWDED is filled with many or too many people or things. How to use crowded in a sentence.

  4. Crowded definition: filled to excess; packed.. See examples of CROWDED used in a sentence.

  5. The meaning of CROWD is to press on : hurry. How to use crowd in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Crowd.

  6. If your timetable, your life, or your mind is crowded, it is full of events, activities, or thoughts. Never before has a summit had such a crowded agenda. ...a long life crowded with incident.

  7. to make someone feel uncomfortable by standing too close to them or by watching them all the time: I need some time to do this work properly, so don't crowd me. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Phrasal verbs. crowd (something) into something. crowd someone/something out. crowd around (someone/something)

  8. adjective. /ˈkraʊdɪd/ having a lot of people or too many people. We made our way through the crowded streets. a crowded bar. The main beach can get really crowded in summer. London was very crowded. crowded with somebody In the spring the place is crowded with skiers. compare uncrowded. Extra Examples. Oxford Collocations Dictionary.

  9. The room was very crowded - there was nowhere to sit. We met in a crowded bar. Our eyes met across a crowded room. The city centre was crowded and noisy. She pushed her way through the crowded market place. (Definition of crowded from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

  10. adj. 1. Filled near or to capacity: a crowded bus. 2. Filled with a crowd: a crowded plaza. 3. Having insufficient space for comfort: "When wealthy Dutch settlers began feeling crowded in lower Manhattan, they moved to verdant farmlands north of the city" ( Janet Groene ). crowd′ed′ness n.

  11. adjective. overfilled or compacted or concentrated. “a crowded theater” “a crowded program” “ crowded trains” “a young mother's crowded days” synonyms: huddled. crowded or massed together. jam-packed, jammed, packed. filled to capacity. thronged. filled with great numbers crowded together. see more. Pronunciation. US. /ˈkraʊdɪd/ UK. /ˈkraʊdɪd/