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sackful

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology 1

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From sack (bag) +‎ -ful.

Noun

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sackful (plural sackfuls or sacksful)

  1. The amount a sack will contain.
    A sackful of sand won't help the soil here much, but a dump truck full would.
    • c. 1623, Owen Felltham, Resolves, Divine, Morall, Politicall[1], London: Henry Seile, Essay 48, p. 155:
      If I be not so rich, as to sowe almes by sackfulls, euen my Mite, is beyond the superfluity of wealth: and my pen, my tongue, and my life, shal (I hope) helpe some to better treasure, then the earth affoords them.
    • 1938 April, George Orwell [pseudonym; Eric Arthur Blair], chapter VI, in Homage to Catalonia, London: Secker & Warburg, →OCLC, page 77:
      Potatoes were getting very scarce. If you got a sackful you could take them down to the cook-house and swap them for a water-bottleful of coffee.
    • 1966, Truman Capote, In Cold Blood[2], New York: Modern Library, published 1992, Part 3, p. 227:
      You live until you die, and it doesn’t matter how you go; dead’s dead. So why carry on like a sackful of sick cats just because Herb Clutter got his throat cut?
  2. (figuratively) A large number or amount (of something).
    • 1590, Henry Barrow, A Brief Discoverie of the False Church[3], page 231:
      what can the Pope say more for his sackfull of traditions?
    • 1680, Richard Head, chapter 7, in The English Rogue Continued in the Life of Meriton Latroon[4], London: Francis Kirkman, page 87:
      [] away we went home again fraught with a Sackful of news to tell our Master.
    • 1853, uncredited translators, German Popular Tales and Household Stories: Collected by the Brothers Grimm, New York: C.S. Francis, Volume I, 74. “The Fox and the Cat,” p. 381,[5]
      [] I understand a hundred arts, and have, moreover, a sackful of cunning!
    • 1915, H. Rider Haggard, chapter 19, in Allan and the Holy Flower[6], London: Longman, Green, page 349:
      Day and night the poor fellow raved, and always about that confounded orchid, the loss of which seemed to weigh upon his mind as though it were a whole sackful of unrepented crimes.
    • 1986, Hanif Kureishi, “Bradford” in Granta 20, Winter, 1986, p. 163,[7]
      He received sackfuls of hate mail and few letters of support.
Translations
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Etymology 2

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From sack (verb) +‎ -ful.

Adjective

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sackful (comparative more sackful, superlative most sackful)

  1. (obsolete) Intent on plunder.
    • c. 1611, George Chapman, transl., The Iliads of Homer[8], London: Nathaniell Butter, Book 2, p. 30:
      Now will I sing the sackfull troopes, Pelasgian Argos held,