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  1. Whelm is labeled as "archaic" in NOAD, as it has fallen out of use. Left in its wake are the would-be superlative overwhelm (which, rather than actually meaning "more than whelmed", has simply taken over its parent's definition) and its opposite underwhelm .

  2. Apr 23, 2020 · Subscribe to the audio podcast at:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3gRQiaxv3M01MxxBIMxkAyStitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/quick-dirty-tips/gr...

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  3. When you are "overwhelmed," you are completely covered, turned over and rendered helpless by something. "Overwhelm" first appeared in English around 1300, but the more figurative sense of "drowning in work" or "overcome by circumstances" first arose in the 16th century.

  4. In this English vocabulary lesson, learn how to use "overwhelm, overwhelmed, overwhelming". To overwhelm is an active verb.

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    • JForrest English
  5. Nov 5, 2014 · When the word “whelm” showed up sometime around 1300 (spelled quelm or welme in Middle English), it meant to overturn or capsize, but that sense is now obsolete, according to the Oxford English Dictionary.

  6. I'm not sure where you are getting this fact from, but it does not seem to be correct. "Whelm" meant/means to capsize or turn upside down. u/iyubit is correct that "over-" is merely an intensifier.

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  8. Oct 4, 2022 · Once you know that whelm means “engulf,” it’s hard to look past the fact that overwhelm basically means “to double drown” or “to inundate and then inundate again.” Overwhelm is an example of pleonasm — a tautological phrase that includes two words that mean the same thing.

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