Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why

fulsome

adjective
Nauseous; offensive. He that brings fulsome objects to my view, with nauseous images my fancy fills.

fulsome

Rank; offensive to the smell; as a rank and fulsome smell.

fulsome

Lustful; as fulsome ewes.

fulsome

Tending to obscenity; as a fulsome epigram. These are the English definitions of fulsome, but I have never witnessed such applications of the word in the United States. It seems then that full and foul are radically the same word, the primary sense of which is stuffed, crowded, from the sense of putting on or in. In the United States, the compound fullsome takes its signification from full, in the sense of cloying or satiating, and in England, fulsome takes its predominant sense from foulness.