shirtful

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English

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Etymology

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From shirt +‎ -ful.

Noun

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shirtful (plural shirtfuls or shirtsful)

  1. As much as is within, on, or held by a shirt.
    • 1892, George T. Ulmer, Adventures and Reminiscences of a Volunteer: A Drummer Boy From Maine:
      I watched him until he disappeared from view, and then thought I would open up the treasure I had buried and deposit some of the shirtful which he had so kindly given me after I had robbed him.
    • 1989, Dennis Schmitz, Eden: poems, page 22:
      Cabrini Project kids bail it back with their hands, soak up shirtsful.
    • 2002, Wilmoth Foreman, Summer of the Skunks, page 34:
      Calvin lays the shirtful of skunk on the ground and holds it with his foot.
    • 2013, Ben Hewitt, Saved: How I Quit Worrying about Money and Became the Richest Guy in the World:
      It was not quite enough time to tackle the wood-fired bathtub contraption, but it was plenty enough to motor up a long, winding hill to the north, where almost a year before we'd found hatfuls and shirtfuls of morel mushrooms with Erik's friend Breakfast.
    • 2018, William Carleton, Willy Reilly, page 196:
      Holy Moses, Mr. Reilly, but you had a narrow escape, Devil a man in the barony can handle a cudgel as I can, and it was a miracle, and you may thank his lordship here for it that you hadn't a shirtful of sore bones.