Home › Words › I › innfulinnfulinnful means enough to fill an inn.EtymologyFrom inn + -ful.nounEnough to fill an inn.e.g.“Nay, hotel-keepers might make up parties, or rather parcels, and send whole innfuls of guests as “goods.”” — 1846 August 8, “Railway Parcels”, in The Spectator. A Weekly Journal of News, Politics, Literature, and Science., volume the nineteenth, number 945, London: Joseph Clayton, page 757:Definitions & examples from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).Words closest in meaningBy meaning, not spelling — each word's AI semantic fingerprint, nearest first.lodgeful 73% match — Enough to fill a lodge. vs innful →tavernful 72% match — Enough to fill a tavern. vs innful →villageful 70% match — Enough to fill a village. vs innful →castleful 69% match — Enough to fill a castle. vs innful →prisonful 69% match — Enough to fill a prison. vs innful →denful 68% match — Enough to fill a den. vs innful →forestful 68% match — Enough to fill a forest. vs innful →lotful 68% match — Enough to fill a lot. vs innful →