bundle
noun /ˈbʌndl/
/ˈbʌndl/
Idioms - [countable] a number of things tied or wrapped together; something that is wrapped up
- a bundle of rags/papers/firewood
- She held her little bundle (= her baby) tightly in her arms.
Extra Examples- She was carrying a large bundle of clothes.
- The papers are in a bundle on my desk.
- a bundle of newspapers
- I dropped the bundle of papers on his desk.
- The hut was empty except for a bundle of firewood in one corner.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- big
- large
- thick
- …
- carry
- hold
- tie something (up) in
- …
- in a/the bundle
- bundle of
- [countable] a number of things that belong, or are sold together
- a bundle of ideas
- a bundle of graphics packages for your PC
- [singular] a bundle of laughs, fun, etc. (informal) a person or thing that makes you laugh
- He wasn't exactly a bundle of laughs (= a happy person to be with) last night.
- a bundle[singular] (informal) a large amount of money
- That car must have cost a bundle.
Word OriginMiddle English: perhaps originally from Old English byndelle ‘a binding’, reinforced by Low German and Dutch bundel (to which byndelle is related).
Idioms
be a bag/bundle of nerves
- (informal) to be very nervous
- By the time of the interview, I was a bundle of nerves.
drop your bundle
- (Australian English, New Zealand English, informal) to suddenly not be able to think clearly; to act in a stupid way because you have lost control over yourself
not go a bundle on somebody/something
- (British English, informal) to not like somebody/something very much