Engorge in a sentence as a verb

Is it worth adding to our already engorged carbon footprints?

There's not much concept of a zone there and I've become more collaborative and less engorged by my work.

I think he still serves foie-gras- goose liver that gets engorged to 10x its normal size due to force feeding.

I think it's meant the 'flood tide', not the lunar tide - the annual flood tide when the rivers and streams are engorged from snow melt over the winter.

Macrophages engorge themselves on the leaking fuel, and may die themselves during this process.

When most people feel full and continue eating food which leads to feeling engorged, they stop eating because they soon feel miserable.

Maybe sugar kicks it into hibernation mode, desiring to engorge everything in site.

I think your muscles will "shrivel" if you don't use them; they won't be engorged with blood on a regular basis, thus will lose plasticity at a cellular level.

Apple, Gruber's Beatrice, is engorged as a company, and seems now to be veering from interestingly complex to dully complicated.

In the current engorged state of private capital, many private investors will have to learn due diligence the hard way, or they will lose their shirts to exceedingly savvy hucksters and grifters masquerading as trailblazing mavericks.

"I'm not just thinking of the country's dysfunctional Congress, pathological infatuation with firearms, addiction to litigation, crazy healthcare arrangements, engorged prison system, chronic inequality, 50-year-old military-industrial complex and out-of-control security services.

Engorge definitions

verb

overeat or eat immodestly; make a pig of oneself; "She stuffed herself at the dinner"; "The kids binged on ice cream"

See also: gorge ingurgitate overindulge glut englut stuff overgorge overeat gormandize