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Idiom or word for a very crowded place

English Language & Usage Asked by RegDwigнt on July 18, 2021

There is a popular idiom in Russian for describing a really crowded place: “(there’s) no room for an apple to fall” (“яблоку негде упасть”).

I struggle to think of anything similar in English, and the dictionaries I consulted were of no help, simply translating it as “crowded” or not even including it at all.

The context would be something and anything along the lines of

The place was so crowded that [X].
The room was full to the extent that [Y].
The street/square was [Z].
At the top of the hat charts, there is [no room for an apple to fall].

Which is to say, I am not married to any sentence structure in particular — I’ll gladly rewrite from scratch to use a vivid and idiomatic adjective or noun, word or phrase, metaphor or saying, rather than try and shoehorn it into a sentence it does not feel itself welcome in.

28 Answers

If it is extremely crowded, you can say "packed like sardines in a can" or just "packed like sardines" or "packed." This comes from the way sardines are tightly packed into cans when canned for eating:

photo of sardines packed in a tin

Strictly speaking, some people will object to this usage: both the place and the people in it can be said to be packed, but only the people can strictly be packed like sardines since the sardines are inside the can and the people are inside the crowded place. However, colloquially people will use the phrase in both senses. Also, most people just say packed:

The subway wasn't working so the buses were all packed.

Answered by Mr. Shiny and New 安宇 on July 18, 2021

There was no room to swing a cat? We were pressed together like peas in a pod (often used to indicate uniformity, but sometimes literal closeness)? You couldn't fit a knife/cigarette paper between the [contestants]?

Answered by Tim Lymington on July 18, 2021

Adding to the nice suggestions so far, I've found one dictionary that offered "there is hardly breathing space".

sufficient space in which to move, work, etc.: The train was so crowded that there was hardly breathing space.

Answered by RegDwigнt on July 18, 2021

In British slang, we often describe a place as "rammed", when full:

(be rammed) British informal (of a place) be very crowded:
    the club is rammed to the rafters every week

enter image description here

Answered by Ste on July 18, 2021

Packed to the gills

Packed to the rafters

Packed to the gunnels (from gunwales <- gun walls) (originally of a ship)

A popular East Side bar, packed to the gunwales with arch young bankers and ersatz Now girls.

Pressed like olives/grapes

packed together tighter than two coats of paint

Bursting at the seams (the room was...)

As crowded as a beehive

Big and poor and as crowded as a beehive.

And since we are photo-heavy...

beehive

"I would rather sit on a pumpkin and have it all to myself, than be crowded on a velvet cushion." - Henry David Thoreau

Answered by anongoodnurse on July 18, 2021

"Like Picadilly Circus" is commonly used in en-GB.

enter image description here

For a more international audience, I'd go with "packed like sardines".

Answered by tobyink on July 18, 2021

"It's like the Black Hole of Calcutta in here." This refers to the tiny dungeon in which British prisoners of war were held in June 1756 after the fall of Fort William, Calcutta, where (allegedly) the vast majority perished from suffocation or heat exhaustion because so many people were crammed into such a small space.

For a one word equivalent of "crowded": crammed, rammed, heaving, packed.

Answered by Philanthropistrog on July 18, 2021

One venerable — nay, agèd — word for overcrowded is opplete, which is both an adjective and a verb.

Quoth the OED regarding the adjective:

oˈpplete, ppl. a. Med. Obs. Also 6 opplet.

Etymology: ad. L. opplēt-us, pa. pple. of opplēre: see next.

Filled up, crowded.

  • 1545 Raynold Byrth Mankynde P j, - The coti lidons be opplete, stopped, & stuffed with yll humours.
  • 1578 Banister Hist. Man i. 34 - The posteriour part [of the leg] is opplet, and filled with much store of flesh.
  • 1646 J. Hall Horæ Vac. 134 - How should they not be opplete with grosse humours?

Quoth the OED regarding the verb:

oˈpplete, v. Med. Obs. rare.

Etymology: f. ppl. stem of L. opplēre to fill up, f. ob- (ob- (def#1) (def#d)) + plēre to f ill.

trans. To fill up, fill to repletion.

  • 1620 Venner Via Recta ii. 41 - They..opplete the ir bodies with waterish, crude, and windy humors.
  • 1620 Venner Via Recta iv. 71 - That it be not..oppleted with much fat.

Answered by tchrist on July 18, 2021

More modern formulations for a crowded place include the idiom that a place is teeming with people. The OED says that teeming as an adjective means

Abounding; swarming; crowded.

Another word you might be looking for is the noun throng. The OED includes these two relevant senses for it:

2. Pressing or crowding of people; an act of thronging or crowding; crowded condition.

3. concr. A crowded mass of persons actually (or in idea) assembled together; a crowd.

There is also a verb throng to accompany the noun, whence derives the adjective thronging meaning pretty much the same thing as teeming. Per the OED:

The action of the verb throng; pressing; crowding.

Answered by tchrist on July 18, 2021

How about "chock-full"?

adjective
[predic.] informal
    filled to overflowing:
        my case is chock-full of notes

And the British term "chock-a-block".

adjective
[predic.] informal, chiefly British
    crammed full of people or things:

Answered by Ste on July 18, 2021

  • 'A sea of people.'
  • 'A writhing sea of humanity.'

Answered by Edwin Ashworth on July 18, 2021

Let's not forget the conventional and all-purpose full house.

full house

noun

an audience, or a group of people attending a meeting, that fills the venue for the event to capacity.

Answered by j.i.h. on July 18, 2021

"Assholes and elbows"

In a crowded place (such as a bar or night club), it's often hard to maneuver for all the assholes and elbows filling up the place.

Answered by Anonomon on July 18, 2021

Packed is the easiest word that comes to mind.

packed

noun

  • cram a large number of things into (a container or space).
    • "it was a large room, packed with beds jammed side by side"
  • (of a large number of people) crowd into and fill (a room, building, or place).
    • "the waiting room was packed"

Answered by yuritsuki on July 18, 2021

The place was so crowded that you couldn't swing a cat. The room was full to the extent that there is no elbow room. The street/square was packed to the rafters. A crowded event might be described as standing-room only.

Answered by Elliott Frisch on July 18, 2021

Irish slang - possibly moribund by now: "jammers" as in - the bar was "jammers"

Answered by Michael Mullany on July 18, 2021

"It's like Grand Central Station ..."

Referring to the hustle and bustle of the very famous and busy railroad terminal in New York City.

Answered by Eric King on July 18, 2021

The place was chocker.

This basically means the place is full, and is presumably an abbreviation of chock-a-block.

You could also say the place was heaving.

Answered by Relaxing In Cyprus on July 18, 2021

How about, "It was a mob scene."

Or perhaps "an ugly mob scene," if it was anything like our local shopping malls this past holiday season...

Answered by Eric Lloyd on July 18, 2021

"That was a clusterfuck."

The first thing to come to my mind when I read the question.

E.g. Urban Dictionary

A corpus search (Google for clusterfuck and crowded) yields 1.2 million results.

Answered by Dogweather on July 18, 2021

A local, possibly New England, expression is "stuffed tighter than a turkey" (or other colorful variation).

Also, as this Houston Chronicle article demonstrates, packed tighter than a pair of Wranglers (or designer jeans) is a relatively common expression.

Answered by Kit Z. Fox on July 18, 2021

From Oxford Dictionaries Online:

brimming

adjective

  • fill or be full to the point of overflowing. "a brimming cup"

and

overflowing

adjective

  • (esp. of a liquid) flow over the brim of a receptacle.

and

overcrowded

adjective

  • filled (accommodations or a space) beyond what is usual or comfortable.

Answered by Lucas Green on July 18, 2021

This might work ... how about 'jam-packed' ?

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/jam-packed

Answered by fell-from-the-sky on July 18, 2021

The place was so crowded you had to go outside to change your mind.

This quip is often used when talking about the size of a cramped room or house, as one writer mentioned in an article about language sometimes used by real estate agents:

For example, he cites the commonly used term "cozy" and says the connotation to savvy Realtors is that there isn't much space in the house.

“It triggers the Henny Youngman in us: ‘This house is so small that you have to go outside to change your mind,’” Boyd says.

Answered by Karndog on July 18, 2021

Bazaar It is urdu for market . It is suitable as asian markets are usually crowded and noisy.

Answered by Aniruddh Joshi on July 18, 2021

Irish has the expression dubh le daoine, and a literal translation of that — “black with people” — is used in Irish English to describe a crowded space. According to a post on boards.ie, this can sometimes be abbreviated to “it’s black in here” to describe a crowded space.

(Interestingly, I learn also from boards.ie of an equivalent expression in French: être noir de monde.)

Answered by TRiG on July 18, 2021

Infestation. There's no reason to elevate one species above others.

Answered by 10 cls on July 18, 2021

Depressingly, the sole local discotheque was packed like the hold of a slave ship. People were crammed in there like the black hole of Calcutta.

Answered by Wayfaring Stranger on July 18, 2021

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