1. packed
All the coaches of the train were packed to capacity ten minutes before it started.
He hastily packed his bags.
About eighty thousand spectators packed into the stadium last night.
Mother sent us grapes packed in a box.
Tom seems to have packed everything but the kitchen sink.
The train was packed.
Passengers are packed in like sardines on city buses.
She packed yesterday, so as to be ready early today.
Packed into wooden fishing boats like sardines, the immigrants undergo the dangerous voyage there.
This club is fearfully dull. The dance floor is empty and the smoking patio is packed.
city packed with tourists
A packed cinema The train was packed. This book is packed with useful information.
Jill: Oh yeah, it's packed, but it was great.
trams are usually packed on weekday mornings
Make it a normal packed lunch, OK?
英語 "という言葉tłoczny"(packed)集合で発生します。
1st ENGLISH TEST2. crowded
On crowded buses young people should give their seats to old people.
Seaside resorts, such as Newport, are very crowded in summer.
The people crowded round the injured man, but they made way for the doctor when he reached the scene of the accident.
I was walking along the crowded street when all at once I heard a shrill cry.
crowded beach
Before now, when you thought of a city, you thought of crowded streets, parking problems, traffic jams, queues, noise and fumes.
It's not crowded at all today. This is the least crowded time of all.
For many years I thought that it was beauty alone that gave significance to life and that the only purpose that could be assigned to the generations that succeed one another on the face of this crowded earth was to produce an artist now and then.
That place is always crowded, but I reserved a table today, so we don't have to worry.
However, many people get nervous when the shops are crowded or when thye have to stand in long queues.
Embassy asked its citizens to be careful in “crowded public areas and popular tourist destinations.”
As the centuries went by and England became more crowded, the people found their food supply a great problem.
When the plane eventually landed in London, I found myself at a noisy and crowded airport.
I don't like going to town on Saturdays – it's too crowded.
The Waterfront's success could mean that other cities soon follow, creating areas that offer people a new kind of city living, with all the benefits and none of the stress, noise and pollution of crowded centres.