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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. Although the word "whelm" is rarely used by itself today, it can describe events both prosaic (as in preserving food by "whelming" -- covering it -- with an overturned bowl) and catastrophic (as in a village being "whelmed" by a flash flood).

  3. Nov 5, 2014 · A: Yes, “whelm” was—and still is—a verb. Though it’s not overwhelmingly popular today, “whelm” is a fine old word with roots that may go back to Anglo-Saxon times.

  4. It is but it it doesn't mean what you'd think it does. The word means to be engulfed/buried by something. A boat that capsized in rough seas was literally overwhelmed by the water. When used without "over" or "under", the non-figurative use of the word is usually implied.

  5. I don't understand what whelm means. Can you use it in an example? If overwhelmed means too much of a thing, and underwhelmed means to little of a thing, does whelmed mean full? or average? what..

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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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