Oodles

//ˈuːd(ə)lz//

Synonyms for "oodles" (113 found)

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

3 relation types

More general

2 entries

Synonyms

1 entries

related to

6 entries

Translations

14 translations across 6 languages.

Powered by Wiktionary

Czech

3 entries
  • kvanta noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)
  • moře noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)
  • spousty noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)

Faroese

1 entries
  • rúgva noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)

French

2 entries
  • foultitude noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)
  • un tas (de) noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)

Hungarian

3 entries
  • rengeteg noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)
  • temérdek noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)
  • tömérdek noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)

Polish

2 entries
  • masa noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)
  • mnóstwo noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)

Swedish

3 entries
  • massor noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)
  • mängder noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)
  • tonvis noun (unspecified large amount, number, or quantity — see also lots)

Sample sentences

4 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

We have oodles of cash.

Source: tatoeba (5298729)

I wonder what would have been, if administrators had chosen Chabacano, Philippine Creole Spanish, as an official language in the Philippines, much as administrators had chosen Tok Pisin, an English-based creole, as an official language in Papua New Guinea. Today, Filipinos wax nostalgic and poetic of the bygone Hispanic Era. After the Spanish-American War of 1898, Puerto Rico retained Spanish, but not the Philippines. Like an effervescent pink drink, English is now the main written language in the Philippines. However, the de facto aural-oral lingua franca in the archipelago is Taglish, the patois of code-switching between the two official languages, Filipino (Tagalog essentially) and English. Chabacano (Chavacano) combines Spanish with native elements. There is in Chabacano no verbal conjugation that does exist in Spanish, Tagalog, and English, which complicates these languages. Native languages in the Philippines have oodles of Spanish-derived words embedded in them. Native languages are of the Austronesian family, said to have originated thousands of years ago in Taiwan. About 200 languages exist in the Philippines. Most of them are of the Austronesian family, whilst Chabacano, an outgrowth of Hispanic colonization, sprouted like mushrooms in various places there.

Source: tatoeba (12438167)

"Along the lake where I went camping once there were oodles of a bright purple thing." / "I don't know what that was," my mother said. "I've never lived near the water. The purplest thing around here is joe-pye weed. We can look him up and see if he has any relatives. Come to think of it, the book had a color index."

Source: wiktionary

Minimalist yet soothing décor, private pools and steam rooms […] and simply oodles of class make this one of the island's top choices. Honeymoon, anyone?

Source: wiktionary

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.