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Where the latter is explosive and superabundant, the former is tender and contained — barely over an hour in length, just four bodies in street clothes and a few simple items on a small, largely unadorned stage.—
Sara Holdren,
Vulture,
7 Feb. 2024 Unlike the superabundant green iguana, which is native to Central and South America and widely introduced elsewhere, there are exceedingly few Anegada rock iguanas.—
Murray Carpenter,
BostonGlobe.com,
4 June 2022 Krill can be superabundant, but only within certain isolated regions of the world ocean, such as upwelling zones and polar oceans.—
Eric M. Keen,
Scientific American,
31 July 2020
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, from Late Latin superabundant-, superabundans, from present participle of superabundare