Fulsome in a sentence as an adjective

So no, there's nothing misleading - this is actually the more fulsome understanding.

"Employers, on the other hand, often have ready access to fulsome data on compensation.

When Bubsy first came out, there was a media blitz in magazines like GamePro, who had fulsome praise and promoted Bubsy as the next Sonic.

You've changed from multiple false claims of influence, so ginned up to a high degree of influence that you concluded with a fulsome "Thank you Dart for showing us the way!

Bonus points for using words without knowing what they mean!> "we don't get that help - although we sometimes get it in a fulsome way after an event has taken place".

A great way to cultivate a more fulsome understanding of a topic is to try to describe it to others, to share your understanding with others.

Here is an example from Merriam-Webster[1]:"the passengers were fulsome in praise of the plane's crew"The usage here seems to be in a similar context.

It's trivial to name dozens of academics who are self-admitted Marxists, and who give Marxist ideas fulsome praise in the classroom.

I can perhaps see some possible value in Microsoft acquiring a fulsome social network of some kind, but a faddish YouTube-like platform?

I was in government as a policy analyst in just this area when these changes were happening, and fulsome promises of just such a third way were made endlessly at the time.

That doesn't seem likely to me. If you want to let the truth be known, but you feel so much under the gun that you issue not just a minimum-compliance false statement but a fulsome one under your own name, would you really feel safe contacting a bunch of other Silicon Valley CEOs to co-ordinate such a subtle but intentional secret message?

> How am I supposed to know "offensively excessive" wasn't the intended meaning here?I'm guessing if it were the intended meaning, "but" would be incorrect in "Republicans will not like many of these proposals, but they have been fulsome in their praise of Mr. Trump since his election"

Fulsome definitions

adjective

unpleasantly and excessively suave or ingratiating in manner or speech; "buttery praise"; "gave him a fulsome introduction"; "an oily sycophantic press agent"; "oleaginous hypocrisy"; "smarmy self-importance"; "the unctuous Uriah Heep"; "soapy compliments"

See also: buttery oily oleaginous smarmy soapy unctuous