the.com/fill
The act of making empty things complain less by giving them stuff.
means To put enough of something into a space, container, or gap that it's no longer empty.
from From Old English 'fyllan,' rooted in the same ancient source as 'full' — to fill is literally to make full, no surprises.
Sibling wordDirectly related to 'full' and 'fulfill.'
Many livesVerb, noun, dental cavity, and tortilla wrap content.
Phrasal armyFill in, fill out, fill up, fill out.