Replete in a sentence as a verb

Calculus for example is replete with the abuse of variable binding which is just cruel to the beginner.

Also it comes replete with the inevitable feynman tales of intellectual dickswinging that we have all come to know and love.

The history of India and indeed the world is replete with so many broken Anglo-Saxon promises that this is simply a joke.

And while I don't look forward to the privacy implications of only Google offering driverless cars, I do look forward to a world replete with driverless cars.

But it's not exactly replete with reliable scientific information.

Replete in a sentence as an adjective

X is replete with applications that have every single possible configuration option.

There's a new fad called Cenegenics which is basically a bodybuilding regimen, replete with steroids given under the rubric of "hormone replacement", for old men.

All such items can be misused as well, and the books are replete with bloated forms of expression used by lawyers, politicians, educators, administrators, and the like who would not know a simple word or sentence even if it stood before them doing somersaults.

Medical history is replete with treating "not-quite-underlying causes" simply because the not-quite-underlying-cause was easily visible; one of the more recent examples is cholesterol.

If they said stop, and you did, and failed anyway, what if they felt bad at whether the IBM sale might've worked?The world is big and unpredictable and replete with stories of people advising others that something can't be done or shouldn't be done that way, only to have the advisees ignore the advisers and do great things.

Replete definitions

verb

fill to satisfaction; "I am sated"

See also: satiate sate fill

adjective

filled to satisfaction with food or drink; "a full stomach"

See also: full

adjective

(followed by `with')deeply filled or permeated; "imbued with the spirit of the Reformation"; "words instinct with love"; "it is replete with misery"