| 释义 | 
		Definition of sackful in English: sackfulnounPlural sackfuls ˈsakfʊlˈsækˌfʊl 1The quantity of something held by a sack.  Example sentencesExamples -  Most vendors arrive by the droves from villages every day, carrying sackfuls of vegetables.
 -  A ballad that Thompson plays live tells Shakespeare's tale of the King of France sending Henry V a sackful of tennis balls, insinuating that he should be playing games, not fighting wars.
 -  A gang of Chinese immigrants, face deportation after being caught stealing sackfuls of protected cockles from a Scottish beach.
 -  I insist on being read each and every one, so that I may duly reward each well-wisher with a sackful of sugar beets from the Zweibel ancestral home in Prussia.
 -  Next door the grocer has piles of fresh fruit, 2lb bags of apples for a quid, every herb you see on Ready Steady Cook or AWT's garden, sackfuls of potatoes of every variety, all displayed in wicker baskets.
 -  The guard, who had been speaking frantically into some kind of communicating device, fell like a sackful of potatoes.
 -  Only a man with a dodgy moustache, a sinister glint in his eye and a sackful of puppies in the boot of his car is likely to raise their suspicions.
 -  A sackful of medals followed, and his partnership with John Toshack is still talked about by misty-eyed Liverpool fans even today.
 -  While all this was under way, out of the white dimness came the contractor, carrying four wooden stakes, a heavy sackful of something, and two bottles of sake; and knowing exactly what to do.
 -  One stall sold a dozen different types of beancurd; others displayed great sackfuls of glossy red chillies and pink Sichuan pepper, or enormous clay urns filled with rice wine.
 -  As word of Balboa's discovery spread, other Spaniards headed for the Gulf of Panama and returned with sackfuls of pearls.
 -  They don't fool me in their red vans and their long white beards and their false ho ho ho laughs, coming down your chimney at Christmas with sackfuls of letters.
 -  When Edward O'Reilly bought the manuscript library of the poet and scribe Muiris Ó Gormáin in 1794 it amounted to five sackfuls.
 -  Peter Townend, pictured, who owns South End Hall on Tickhill Street, off Leeds Road, arrived at work yesterday to find sackfuls of refuse blocking the entrance to his premises.
 -  A Health board faces the threat of prosecution and a hefty fine following the discovery of several sackfuls of waste in a field near one of its clinics.
 -  Mr Gallagher said Mrs Gillard was then bombarded with flowers and chocolates and sackfuls of junk mail at the home she shared with her husband Alaric.
 -  The contingent from the Royal Regiment - formerly the Lancashire Fusiliers - brought a sackful of cuddly toys to hand out as presents.
 -  Under cover of darkness, and armed with sackfuls of rubbish, he wreaks havoc on the tidy town's effort, dumping in areas which have recently been cleaned up by local environmentalists.
 
 - 1.1British  A large number or amount of something.
 they've got a sackful of valuable entertainment copyrights  there was plenty for dessert—apricots and mulberries by the sackful  
    Definition of sackful in US English: sackfulnounˈsakˌfo͝olˈsækˌfʊl 1The quantity of something held by a sack.  Example sentencesExamples -  A sackful of medals followed, and his partnership with John Toshack is still talked about by misty-eyed Liverpool fans even today.
 -  A ballad that Thompson plays live tells Shakespeare's tale of the King of France sending Henry V a sackful of tennis balls, insinuating that he should be playing games, not fighting wars.
 -  As word of Balboa's discovery spread, other Spaniards headed for the Gulf of Panama and returned with sackfuls of pearls.
 -  While all this was under way, out of the white dimness came the contractor, carrying four wooden stakes, a heavy sackful of something, and two bottles of sake; and knowing exactly what to do.
 -  Most vendors arrive by the droves from villages every day, carrying sackfuls of vegetables.
 -  One stall sold a dozen different types of beancurd; others displayed great sackfuls of glossy red chillies and pink Sichuan pepper, or enormous clay urns filled with rice wine.
 -  Peter Townend, pictured, who owns South End Hall on Tickhill Street, off Leeds Road, arrived at work yesterday to find sackfuls of refuse blocking the entrance to his premises.
 -  I insist on being read each and every one, so that I may duly reward each well-wisher with a sackful of sugar beets from the Zweibel ancestral home in Prussia.
 -  They don't fool me in their red vans and their long white beards and their false ho ho ho laughs, coming down your chimney at Christmas with sackfuls of letters.
 -  Next door the grocer has piles of fresh fruit, 2lb bags of apples for a quid, every herb you see on Ready Steady Cook or AWT's garden, sackfuls of potatoes of every variety, all displayed in wicker baskets.
 -  A gang of Chinese immigrants, face deportation after being caught stealing sackfuls of protected cockles from a Scottish beach.
 -  Mr Gallagher said Mrs Gillard was then bombarded with flowers and chocolates and sackfuls of junk mail at the home she shared with her husband Alaric.
 -  The contingent from the Royal Regiment - formerly the Lancashire Fusiliers - brought a sackful of cuddly toys to hand out as presents.
 -  Under cover of darkness, and armed with sackfuls of rubbish, he wreaks havoc on the tidy town's effort, dumping in areas which have recently been cleaned up by local environmentalists.
 -  Only a man with a dodgy moustache, a sinister glint in his eye and a sackful of puppies in the boot of his car is likely to raise their suspicions.
 -  When Edward O'Reilly bought the manuscript library of the poet and scribe Muiris Ó Gormáin in 1794 it amounted to five sackfuls.
 -  A Health board faces the threat of prosecution and a hefty fine following the discovery of several sackfuls of waste in a field near one of its clinics.
 -  The guard, who had been speaking frantically into some kind of communicating device, fell like a sackful of potatoes.
 
 - 1.1British  A large number or amount of something.
 they've got a sackful of valuable entertainment copyrights  there was plenty for dessert—apricots and mulberries by the sackful  
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