English
Etymology
From full + fraught.
Adjective
full-fraught (comparative more full-fraught, superlative most full-fraught)
- (archaic) Laden or stored to fullness; fully loaded.
1870, Samuel Reynolds Hole, A Book about Roses:It must have been a tailor who substituted the name of his beloved esculent for a word so full-fraught with sweetness, so suggestive of the brave and the beautiful, of romance and poesy, [...]