B2 adjective #24 most common 3 min read

flood

A flood describes a place that is covered with too much water.

Explanation at your level:

A flood is when there is too much water on the ground. Think of a big rainstorm. The streets can be a flood. It is dangerous. You must be careful when there is a flood.

When an area is a flood, it means water covers the land. We often use the word 'flooded' to describe this. For example: 'The street is flooded after the rain.' It is not good for houses or cars.

The word flood relates to an overflow of water. In news, you hear about 'flood warnings.' It can also mean having too many of something, like a 'flood of messages' on your phone. It describes a situation where things are coming at you very fast and in large numbers.

While 'flood' is primarily a noun or verb, it functions as an adjective in compound nouns like 'flood damage' or 'flood prevention.' Metaphorically, it describes an overwhelming abundance. You might describe a 'flood of emotions' after hearing big news. It implies a lack of control due to volume.

In advanced English, 'flood' is used to create vivid imagery. It characterizes a state of saturation. When we speak of 'flood-prone' regions, we are using it as a technical adjective. Figuratively, it suggests an unstoppable force, whether it is water, information, or human sentiment. It is a strong, evocative term that emphasizes scale and impact.

Etymologically, 'flood' carries the weight of ancient, elemental forces. In literary contexts, it describes a deluge that washes away the old to make room for the new. It transcends simple water damage, often serving as a metaphor for societal upheaval or overwhelming psychological states. Mastery of this word involves understanding its transition from a physical descriptor to a powerful rhetorical device used to emphasize magnitude and inevitability.

Word in 30 Seconds

  • A flood is an overflow of water.
  • Use 'flooded' as an adjective.
  • It works as a metaphor for being overwhelmed.
  • Rhymes with mud.

Hey there! When we talk about flood as an adjective, we are usually looking at the state of a place that has been overtaken by water. Think of a river overflowing its banks; the land nearby becomes a flooded area.

It is important to note that while we use 'flood' as a noun or verb, when describing a state, we often use the past participle flooded. However, in certain contexts, we describe conditions as 'flood-prone' or 'flood-damaged'.

Metaphorically, you might hear someone say they are in a 'flood' of work. It paints a picture of being completely surrounded and unable to keep your head above water. It is a powerful, vivid way to describe intensity!

The word flood has deep roots in Old English, coming from the word flod. It is part of the Germanic family of languages, sharing a common ancestor with the German word Flut.

Historically, it referred to the 'flowing' of water, specifically the tide. In ancient times, people were obsessed with the movement of rivers and oceans, so words describing water were very common in daily speech.

Over centuries, the word evolved from just describing the tide to describing any overwhelming overflow. It is fascinating how a simple word for a river's movement became a metaphor for being overwhelmed by life's challenges.

You will most often see this word used in news reports or weather updates. We talk about flood zones or flood warnings to keep people safe.

In casual conversation, you might say, 'My inbox is a flood of emails.' It is a bit dramatic, but it perfectly captures that feeling of having too much to handle at once.

Remember that 'flooded' is the standard adjective form for a physical state, while 'flood' acts as a modifier in compound nouns like flood control or flood damage.

Floodgates open: Used when something that was held back is suddenly released, like emotions or secrets.

Flood of tears: Describes someone crying very heavily and uncontrollably.

Flood the market: A business term for releasing too many products at once.

High-water mark: The highest level a flood reaches, often used to describe a peak achievement.

Come hell or high water: A classic idiom meaning you will do something no matter what obstacles arise.

Pronounced as /flʌd/, it rhymes with 'mud' and 'blood'. Note that the 'oo' sound is short, which is a common trap for learners!

As an adjective, it is often used in the form flooded. When used as a noun, the plural is floods. It is a countable noun in that sense.

Stress is always on the single syllable. It is a very punchy, strong word that carries a lot of weight in a sentence.

Fun Fact

It is related to the word 'flow'!

Pronunciation Guide

UK /flʌd/

Short 'u' sound like in 'cup'.

US /flʌd/

Short 'u' sound like in 'cup'.

Common Errors

  • pronouncing as 'flooed'
  • rhyming with 'food'
  • stressing the wrong syllable

Rhymes With

blood mud stud thud bud

Difficulty Rating

Reading 2/5

Easy to read

Writing 2/5

Easy to use

Speaking 2/5

Easy to pronounce

Listening 2/5

Easy to hear

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

water rain river

Learn Next

inundate deluge overflow

Advanced

cataclysm saturation

Grammar to Know

Past Participle as Adjective

The flooded house.

Countable Nouns

A flood.

Compound Nouns

Flood control.

Examples by Level

1

The street is a flood.

street = road, flood = water

Simple subject-verb-complement

2

Look at the flood.

look = see

Imperative

3

The rain is a flood.

rain = water from sky

Noun usage

4

Avoid the flood.

avoid = stay away

Imperative

5

The water is a flood.

water = liquid

Simple sentence

6

I see a flood.

see = watch

Subject-verb-object

7

Is it a flood?

question

Question form

8

No more flood.

no more = finished

Phrase

1

The basement is flooded.

2

We saw the flood damage.

3

The river caused a flood.

4

Stay away from the flooded park.

5

The flood water is high.

6

Heavy rain brings a flood.

7

The city had a big flood.

8

They are fixing the flooded road.

1

The flood warning was issued.

2

He received a flood of emails.

3

The flood gates were opened.

4

We are in a flood-prone area.

5

The basement was completely flooded.

6

A flood of memories returned.

7

The flood destroyed the bridge.

8

She felt a flood of relief.

1

The region is historically flood-prone.

2

The company faced a flood of complaints.

3

We witnessed a flood of refugees.

4

The house suffered extensive flood damage.

5

A flood of light entered the room.

6

The flood of data was overwhelming.

7

They implemented a new flood control system.

8

The flood of visitors was unexpected.

1

The flood of information is paralyzing.

2

The valley is a flood-plain.

3

A flood of nostalgia washed over him.

4

The flood of capital changed the economy.

5

They managed the flood of applications.

6

The narrative was a flood of metaphors.

7

The flood of change was inevitable.

8

The flood of support was heartwarming.

1

The flood of history cannot be stemmed.

2

A flood of light illuminated the cathedral.

3

The flood of rhetoric was exhausting.

4

He was caught in a flood of contradictions.

5

The flood of time erodes all things.

6

Her words were a flood of pure truth.

7

The flood of innovation transformed the industry.

8

They survived the flood of adversity.

Synonyms

inundated overwhelmed swamped submerged saturated overflowing

Antonyms

Common Collocations

flood warning
flood damage
flood control
flood plain
a flood of
severely flooded
flood water
flood zone
prevent a flood
massive flood

Idioms & Expressions

"come hell or high water"

no matter what happens

I will finish this, come hell or high water.

casual

"open the floodgates"

to release something suppressed

Her apology opened the floodgates of his anger.

neutral

"flood the market"

to sell too much of something

They flooded the market with cheap toys.

business

"high-water mark"

the peak level

This project is the high-water mark of her career.

formal

"flood of tears"

crying hard

She burst into a flood of tears.

neutral

"in full flood"

at the height of activity

The debate was in full flood.

literary

Easily Confused

flood vs flow

similar spelling

flow is movement, flood is overflow

The river flows; the flood covers the land.

flood vs flod

misspelling

not a word

Always use flood.

flood vs puddle

both water

puddle is small, flood is large

A puddle is in the street; a flood covers the town.

flood vs deluge

synonym

deluge is usually rain-based

A deluge of rain caused a flood.

Sentence Patterns

A2

The [noun] was flooded.

The room was flooded.

B1

A flood of [noun] [verb].

A flood of light filled the room.

A2

The flood caused [noun].

The flood caused damage.

B1

We are in a flood zone.

We are in a flood zone.

B2

The floodgates were opened.

The floodgates were opened.

Word Family

Nouns

flooding the state of being flooded

Verbs

flood to cover with water

Adjectives

flooded covered in water

Related

deluge synonym

How to Use It

frequency

7

Formality Scale

inundation (formal) flood (neutral) overflow (casual)

Common Mistakes

using 'flood' as an adjective for a wet room flooded
Use the participle form for states.
confusing flood with flow flood = overflow; flow = move
Different meanings.
pluralizing flood as 'floodes' floods
Standard spelling.
using 'flood' for a small amount of liquid spill or puddle
Flood implies a large scale.
forgetting 'a' before flood a flood
It is a countable noun.

Tips

💡

Rhyme Time

Remember flood/mud/blood.

💡

Metaphorical Use

Use it for 'too much' of anything.

🌍

Safety

Understand 'flood warning' signs.

💡

Participle

Use 'flooded' for the state of an object.

💡

Short Vowel

Do not say 'flooed'.

💡

Countability

Always use an article.

💡

Etymology

It shares roots with flow.

💡

Context

Read weather reports.

💡

Compound Nouns

Learn flood-prone and flood-damaged.

💡

Intensity

Use it to emphasize scale.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

Flood rhymes with mud; floods bring mud.

Visual Association

A house surrounded by brown water.

Word Web

water rain overflow disaster

Challenge

Describe a time you felt overwhelmed using the word flood.

Word Origin

Old English

Original meaning: flowing water or tide

Cultural Context

Can be a sensitive topic in areas prone to natural disasters.

Often associated with emergency warnings in the UK and US.

Led Zeppelin's 'When the Levee Breaks' Biblical stories of the Great Flood

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

weather reports

  • flood warning
  • rising flood waters
  • severe flooding

business

  • flood the market
  • flood of orders
  • flood of inquiries

emotional

  • flood of tears
  • flood of memories
  • flood of relief

home maintenance

  • flood damage
  • prevent flooding
  • basement flood

Conversation Starters

"Have you ever seen a flood in real life?"

"What do you do if there is a flood warning?"

"Can you describe a time you felt a 'flood' of emotions?"

"Why do you think some areas are more flood-prone than others?"

"How does a flood change a community?"

Journal Prompts

Describe a rainy day that turned into a flood.

Write about a time you were overwhelmed by a 'flood' of tasks.

What measures can cities take to prevent flooding?

Reflect on the power of water in nature.

Frequently Asked Questions

8 questions

Yes, it can be a verb meaning to cover with water.

It rhymes with mud.

Usually, but it can be neutral when used metaphorically.

Flooded is the most common adjective.

Yes, a flood of people.

Yes, a flood, two floods.

Yes, floods.

It is neutral and widely used.

Test Yourself

fill blank A1

The street is a ___.

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: flood

The context implies water on the street.

multiple choice A2

Which word describes a place covered in water?

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: flooded

Flooded is the adjective form.

true false B1

A flood of emails means you have very few emails.

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: False

It means you have many.

match pairs B1

Word

Meaning

All matched!

Matching synonyms and parts.

sentence order B2

Tap words below to build the sentence
Correct! Not quite. Correct answer:

The basement was flooded.

Score: /5

Related Content

More Weather words

snowy

A1

Describes a place or time that is covered with snow or has a lot of snow falling. It is often used to talk about winter weather and the white appearance of the ground.

fog

A1

Fog is a thick cloud of tiny water droplets suspended in the atmosphere at or near the earth's surface. it obscures or restricts visibility, making it difficult to see far ahead.

drought

B2

A drought is a prolonged period of time characterized by a lack of precipitation, leading to a severe shortage of water. In a broader sense, it can also refer to a continuous period without a particular item or activity, such as a lack of success in sports.

temperate

A1

Temperate describes weather or a climate that is mild and moderate. It means the temperature is usually not very hot and not very cold throughout the year.

storms

B1

Violent atmospheric disturbances characterized by strong winds, precipitation, and often thunder and lightning. Metaphorically, it refers to tumultuous reactions, emotional outbursts, or violent assaults.

wet

A1

Describes something that is covered in or full of water or another liquid. In the context of weather, it refers to a day or period when it is raining.

rain

A1

Rain is water that falls from clouds in the sky in small drops. It is a natural weather event that provides water for plants and fills rivers and lakes.

blizzard

B2

A severe snowstorm characterized by very strong winds and low visibility over an extended period. In a metaphorical sense, it refers to an overwhelming or confusing mass of something that arrives suddenly, such as data or paperwork.

windy

A1

Windy is an adjective used to describe weather conditions where there is a lot of strong, moving air. It characterizes a day or a place where the wind is blowing harder than usual, often making it feel colder or causing objects to move.

wind

A1

Wind is the natural movement of the air outside. It can be a light breeze that you barely feel or a strong force that moves trees and buildings.

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