In the summer of 1993, record rains in the Midwest caused the Mississippi River to overflow its banks, break through levees, and inundate the entire countryside; such an inundation hadn't been seen for at least a hundred years. By contrast, the Nile River inundated its entire valley every year, bringing the rich black silt that made the valley one of the most fertile places on earth. (The inundations ceased with the completion of the Aswan High Dam in 1970.) Whenever a critical issue is being debated, the White House and Congressional offices are inundated with phone calls and emails, just as a town may be inundated with complaints when it starts charging a fee for garbage pickup.
Rising rivers could inundate low-lying areas.
water from the overflowing bathtub inundated the bathroom floor
Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to
show current usage.Read More
Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors.
Send us feedback.
Then we are inundated with being male-centered and then man-haters.—
Armando Tinoco,
Deadline,
28 June 2026 By the afternoon, he was inundated with media obligations, like showing off his custom fit on the red carpet.—
Pj Green,
Kansas City Star,
24 June 2026 One of the perks of being a shopping editor is that our inboxes are regularly inundated with the best deals from some of the buzziest brands.—
Essence Wiley,
InStyle,
25 June 2026 When one pond was full, Casad started digging a second one so the excess water wouldn’t inundate his neighbor’s property.—
Emily Cureton Cook,
ProPublica,
26 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for inundate
Word History
Etymology
Latin inundatus, past participle of inundare, from in- + unda wave — more at water