ETYM Old Eng. bagge; cf. Icel. baggi, and also Old Fren. bague, bundle, Late Lat. baga.
1. A flexible (usually cloth, paper, or plastic) container with a single opening.
2. The quantity that a bag will hold; SYN. bagful.
3. A sack used for carrying money and small personal items or accessories (especially by women); SYN. handbag, pocketbook, purse.
4. A portable rectangular traveling bag for carrying clothes; SYN. traveling bag, grip, suitcase.
5. The quantity of game taken in a particular period (usually by one person).
6. An ugly or ill-tempered woman; SYN. old bag.
ETYM Latin See Burse.
A small fluid-filled sac located between movable parts of the body especially at joints.
Sac, especially fluid-filled at point of friction in joint, etc.
1. A bag made of paper or plastic for holding customer's purchases; SYN. poke, paper bag, carrier bag.
2. A woman's full loose hip-length jacket; SYN. sacque.
3. The quantity contained in a sack; SYN. sackful.
Erna, 1898, [a] 1972, dt. Sängerin, Stimme von ungewöhnlichem Umfang (bis c4).
Abkürzung für Selective Acknowledgement