If a place or surface is stacked with objects, it is filled with piles of them.
Shops in Ho Chi Minh City are stacked with goods. [+ with]
...his house has 20 rooms stacked with paintings.
stacked in British English
(stækt)
adjective
slang a variant of well-stacked
stacked in American English
(stækt)
adjective
US, Slang
having a full, shapely figure; curvaceous
said of a woman
Examples of 'stacked' in a sentence
stacked
Several large television monitors stacked in a console on the desk behind him seemed to be showing nothing, or nothing much.
Smith, Mitchell STONE CITY (2002)
The long hall, dark here with its ceiling lights off, was narrowed by stored planks stacked on either side.
Smith, Mitchell STONE CITY (2002)
I squirmed around on the floor looking between the stacked columns for something with an edge.
Robert Wilson INSTRUMENTS OF DARKNESS (2002)
To the top of the phone-box, they were stacked like goods on a supermarket shelf.
Mark Burnell THE RHYTHM SECTION (2002)
All related terms of 'stacked'
stack
A stack of things is a pile of them.
stacked heel
a heel on a shoe composed of several layers, as of leather , of alternating shades
well-stacked
(of a woman ) of voluptuous proportions
stack-up
If you ask how one person or thing stacks up against other people or things, you are asking how the one compares with the others.
the odds are stacked against sb/things are stacked against sb
If you say that the odds are stacked against someone, or that particular factors are stacked against them, you mean that they are unlikely to succeed in what they want to do because the conditions are not favourable .