<span class="searchmatch">old</span> <span class="searchmatch">bags</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">old</span> bag...
<span class="searchmatch">old</span> bag (plural <span class="searchmatch">old</span> <span class="searchmatch">bags</span>) (British, derogatory) A nasty, troublesome <span class="searchmatch">old</span> woman. Synonym: <span class="searchmatch">old</span> hag Coordinate terms: <span class="searchmatch">old</span> lady, ragbag, bag lady Translations...
<span class="searchmatch">bags</span> of bones plural of bag of bones 1875 November, “At the Gates of the East”, in The Atlantic Monthly, page 530: What a lot of scrawny <span class="searchmatch">old</span> women! lean...
two alternatives. 2001 June 25, Belinda Luscombe, “Dusting Off Fashion's <span class="searchmatch">Old</span> <span class="searchmatch">Bags</span>”, in Time: Will it work? It's a tough call. choice which is difficult to...
all plastic <span class="searchmatch">bags</span>, regardless of thickness. The only option for customers who lack their own reusable shopping <span class="searchmatch">bags</span> will be buying paper <span class="searchmatch">bags</span> for 10 cents...
teabag and tea bag tea-bag (plural tea-<span class="searchmatch">bags</span>) Alternative spelling of teabag. 1990, Iain Crichton Smith, “The <span class="searchmatch">Old</span> Woman, the Baby and Terry”, in Selected...
woman who carries her possessions with her in <span class="searchmatch">bags</span>. Synonym: shopping-bag lady Coordinate terms: ragbag, <span class="searchmatch">old</span> bag homeless woman bag boy bag man cat lady...
bag of bones (plural <span class="searchmatch">bags</span> of bones) (idiomatic) A skinny, malnourished person or animal. 1938, Norman Lindsay, Age of Consent, 1st Australian edition,...
IPA (<span class="searchmatch">old</span>-style, no sandhi): /sau¹¹ ma⁵³ ma⁵³⁻¹¹/ 捎馬馬 (Jin, historical) type of rectangle-shaped pocket with a pouch in the middle and two <span class="searchmatch">bags</span> at the...
related to Japanese 箱 (hako), from <span class="searchmatch">Old</span> Japanese pako; the final -니 element appears to be some kind of suffix related to <span class="searchmatch">bags</span> or containers, also appearing...