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[ UK /bˈʌndə‍l/ ]
[ US /ˈbəndəɫ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a package of several things tied together for carrying or storing
  2. a large sum of money (especially as pay or profit)
    they sank megabucks into their new house
    she made a bundle selling real estate
  3. a collection of things wrapped or boxed together
VERB
  1. sleep fully clothed in the same bed with one's betrothed
  2. gather or cause to gather into a cluster
    She bunched her fingers into a fist
  3. compress into a wad
    wad paper into the box
  4. make into a bundle
    he bundled up his few possessions

How To Use bundle In A Sentence

  • The bundled documentation contains the detailed instructions on how to do these tasks.
  • Baffler editors have called commodification of dissent stretches back to Adorno and Horkheimer's Dialectic of Enlightenment and is alive and well in what he calls the "alienation market" in which films like Fahrenheit 9 / 11 either already have or are destined to make bundles (relatively speaking, of course). GreenCine Daily
  • The guest got very drunk so they bundled him into a taxi and sent him home.
  • Several questions ran through our heads as we made our way past the numerous coffee shops and bundled up against the swirling winds the port city is known for.
  • That's about four acres under cultivation - enough to produce a total harvest last year of about 10,000 bundles.
  • The most striking but by no means the only instances are the hole cut in a page of his novel Albert Angelo and the presentation, in The Unfortunates, of a box containing a bundle of unbound gatherings to be read in random order.
  • Savers with a bundle of cash locked into a bond should have snapped them up. Times, Sunday Times
  • Street vendors sell bundles of sticky rice bound in banana leaf. Times, Sunday Times
  • Practically speaking, all the stops that require dragging the wheels will put a bigger dent in your wallet since wheels cost a bundle.
  • They're then bundled, or syndicated, in the secondary market.
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