satchel

[ UK /sˈæt‍ʃə‍l/ ]
NOUN
  1. luggage consisting of a small case with a flat bottom and (usually) a shoulder strap

How To Use satchel In A Sentence

  • Both men are from Brooklyn, both have children named Satchel, both are basketball fans, devout Knicks supporters, and both have made the clamorous city of New York their sound stage.
  • I slung my satchel over my shoulder and shook her outstretched hand.
  • They didn't speak for some time, until Faimon closed the book, and put it into his satchel.
  • To travel through the world it is necessary to have the mouth of hog, the legs of a stag, the eyes of a falcon, the ears of an ass, shoulders of a camel, and the face of an ape, and overplus, a satchel full of money and patience. 
  • Tara just looked at his face while Rob started to open his satchel and take out a small sketch book.
  • To travel through the world it is necessary to have the mouth of hog, the legs of a stag, the eyes of a falcon, the ears of an ass, shoulders of a camel, and the face of an ape, and overplus, a satchel full of money and patience. 
  • Airen was waiting on Pier Seven the next morning, her satchel resupplied after having spent the last of her savings from home on quill pens, ink, and parchment.
  • Jim had been laid up for months and still carried a satchel full of medications.
  • I stood up, and wrung out my hair, and went to my satchel and pulled off the shift that was clinging to me, and rubbed myself dry and put on a fresh shift.
  • Another young redcap took a look at the contraption and proclaimed that Paige looked like “a walking satchel tree.” Satch, Dizzy & Rapid Robert
View all