English edit

Etymology edit

a- +‎ freight

Adjective edit

afreight (not comparable)

  1. (literary, chiefly figurative) Filled or charged (with something).
    Synonym: freighted
    • 1898, Robert Stevens Pettet, “Columbia’s Apostasy”, in Columbia’s Apostasy[1], Philadelphia: for the author, page 6:
      The air with anguish all afreight, / Breeds pestilence within our state,
    • 1907, George Cathcart Bronson, Thou Shalt Waken, Los Angeles: H. L. Ward, Part 3, p. 77,[2]
      I bow my head, here in the cool night air / That fans my cheek, afreight with odors rare:
    • 1979, Cormac McCarthy, Suttree, New York: Vintage, published 1992, page 4:
      Beyond in the dark the river flows in a sluggard ooze toward southern seas, running down out of the rain flattened corn and petty crops and riverloam gardens of upcountry land keepers, grating along like bonedust, afreight with the past, dreams dispersed in the water someway, nothing ever lost.
    • 1998, A. A. Attanasio (as Adam Lee), The Shadow Eater, New York: Avon Eos, Part 1, p. 7,[3]
      an aspiring helix of clematis and hanging roses white and yellow and afreight with golden bees intoxicated by attar