释义 |
[ sak-fool ] / ˈsæk fʊl /
noun, plural sack·fuls.the amount a sack will hold. Origin of sackfulFirst recorded in 1475–85; sack1 + -ful usage note for sackfulSee -ful. Words nearby sackfulsackcloth, sackcloth and ashes, sack coat, sack dress, sacker, sackful, sacking, sack out, sack race, Sacks, sack suit Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for sackfulBuy when they say you have to make your own bed they really mean it and hand you a sackful of straw. His Royal Hayness|Tom Sykes|April 11, 2012|DAILY BEAST The troll then gave the old man a sackful of money, and laden with this he betook himself homewards. The Pink Fairy Book|Various There may be five hundred such mills on one island, not capable any one of them of grinding above a sackful of corn at a time. The Pirate|Sir Walter Scott The youthful King David appeared with his sling and his sackful of pebbles. The Devil's Elixir|E. T. A. Hoffmann
If you can contrive to take home a sackful of those stones, old man, you need no longer fear money troubles, eh? The Adventures of Dick Maitland|Harry Collingwood She went in and bought a sackful, and wandered on down the street, munching. Cheerful--By Request|Edna Ferber
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