i Register
In some senses, fraught is marked as figuratively, obsolete, archaic. Watch for register when choosing this word.
noun
The hire of a boat or ship to transport cargo.
Money paid to hire a vessel for this purpose; freight.
fraught money
The transportation of goods, especially in a boat or ship.
A ship's cargo; freight, lading.
VVell, goe / And bid the Merchants and my men diſpatch / And come aſhore, and ſee the fraught discharg'd.
And novv behold after my vvinters toyle, / My paynefull voyage on the boyſtrous ſea, / Of vvarres deuouring gulphes and ſteely rocks, / I bring my fraught vnto the vviſhed port / My Summers hope, my trauels ſvveet reward: […]
Two bucketfuls.
The manse […] is reached […] by a wide, straight path, so rough that to carry a fraught of water to the manse without spilling was to be superlatively good at one thing.
verb
To load (a boat, ship, or other vessel) with cargo.
The ſhips are ſafe thou ſaiſt, and richly fraught?
[…] I denie that the Proteſtant doth not meddle vvith theſe things, but fraughteth his ſhippe onely vvith faith, and neuer beateth his braine about ſinnes.
To burden or load (someone or something).
From God these heavy cares are sent for our unrests; / And with such burdens for our wealth he fraughteth full our breasts.
If after this command thou fraught the Court / VVith thy vnvvorthineſſe, thou dyeſt.
Followed by with: to furnish or provide (something).
Therefore in ſayinge that he ſeeketh to none in heauẽ ſaue only god, he reiecteth all the counterfet Gods with which the comon errour & foly of yͤ world fraughteth heauen.
[H]ee [Henry I of England] tooke chiefe pleaſure to reſide in his nevv Palace, vvhich himſelfe built at Oxford, both for the delight he had in learned men, himſelfe being very learned, and for the vicinity of his nevv Parke at VVoodſtocke, vvhich hee had fraught vvith all kind of ſtrange beaſts, vvherein hee much delighted, as Lyons, Leopards, Lynces, Camels, Porcupines, and the like.
To hire (a vessel) to transport cargo or passengers.
To transport (cargo or passengers) in a vessel; to freight.
adj
Of a boat, ship, or other vessel: laden with cargo.
The ſhippes retyre with riches full yfraught, […]
Theſe Shippes were fraught with men and women, and had to theyr Captayne one called Bartholoin or Partholin.
Followed by with: carrying, or charged or loaded up with (usually something negative); accompanied by; entailing.
[O]ne the other fiercely did encounter, / Like Lions two yfraught with boyling wrath, […]
Fayre boſome fraught vvith vertues richeſt treſure, / The neaſt of loue, the lodging of delight: / the bovvre of bliſſe, the paradice of pleaſure, / the ſacred harbour of that heuenly ſpright.
Carrying or loaded with anxiety, fear, or stress, for example, due to complexity or difficulty; distressed; also, causing distress; distressing.
a fraught relationship a fraught process
Nor less her son the like encouraged she / To party bitterness, that was in her, / Ev'n of the fraughtest growth that well could be, / Surpassing most of men's, […]
Followed by with: furnished, provided.
[W]hen the worlde is fraughted with ſo manye varlettes, that it will be a long time ere a man ſhall diſcerne the faythful from the Hipocrites.
Hovv vvondrouſly vvould he her face commend, / Aboue that Idole of his fayning thought, / That all the vvorld ſhold vvith his rimes be fraught?