oodles

[ood-lz] /ˈud lz/
noun, (sometimes used with a singular verb) Informal.
1.
a large quantity:
oodles of love; oodles of money.
Origin
1865-70; origin uncertain
Examples from the web for oodles
  • Not enough to really sway anyone, but enough to alleviate the need for oodles of soft money.
  • Cheap digital storage, ubiquitous connectivity and oodles of processing power have changed the way people think about memory.
  • Instead of steering their cars, drivers would have oodles of time on their hands to do other things, such as surfing the web.
  • oodles more platforms will be needed to act as way-stations for helicopters ferrying personnel out and back.
  • Shoveling oodles of cash into an elite groups hands failed the free market.
  • Such machines consume oodles of power, so heat dissipation becomes a fundamental concern.
  • Facility at the keyboard has minimized frustration and saved me oodles of time in our computing-centered world.
  • There are oodles of ways students can leverage technology.
British Dictionary definitions for oodles

oodles

/ˈuːdəlz/
plural noun
1.
(informal) great quantities: oodles of money
Word Origin
C20: of uncertain origin
Word Origin and History for oodles
n.

"lots," 1869, American English (originally in a Texas context), perhaps from the caboodle in kit and caboodle (see kit).

Slang definitions & phrases for oodles

oodles

noun

A large amount; lots; a SHITHOUSE FULL, a SHITLOAD: They have oodles of charisma

[1869+; perhaps fr boodle, caboodle]