Flood (n) 1. a great flowing or overflowing of water, esp. over land not usually submerged. 2. any great outpouring or stream: a flood of tears. (v) 7. to overflow in or cover with a flood; fill to overflowing: Don’t flood the bathtub.
Give me a break… of course flood isn’t defined where it comes from… the intent isn’t to exclude a type of flood or an event leading to the flood. This is just another frivilous lawsuit from people who didn’t read their policy contracts until it was too late (or who didn’t think an area below sea level that’s prone to hurricane activity would EVER actually flood).
We have updated our privacy policy to be more clear and meet the new requirements of the GDPR. By continuing to use our site, you accept our revised Privacy Policy.
From dictionary.com:
Flood (n) 1. a great flowing or overflowing of water, esp. over land not usually submerged. 2. any great outpouring or stream: a flood of tears. (v) 7. to overflow in or cover with a flood; fill to overflowing: Don’t flood the bathtub.
Give me a break… of course flood isn’t defined where it comes from… the intent isn’t to exclude a type of flood or an event leading to the flood. This is just another frivilous lawsuit from people who didn’t read their policy contracts until it was too late (or who didn’t think an area below sea level that’s prone to hurricane activity would EVER actually flood).