10 April 2018
carpetbag
[kahr-pit-bag]
noun
1. a bag for traveling, especially one made of carpeting.
verb (used without object), carpetbagged, carpetbagging.
2. to journey with little luggage.
3. to act as a carpetbagger.
Slang definitions & phrases for carpetbag
carpetbag
verb
To try to make a good impression (1930s+ Students)
The Dictionary of American Slang, Fourth Edition by Barbara Ann Kipfer, PhD. and Robert L. Chapman, Ph.D.
Copyright (C) 2007 by HarperCollins Publishers.
Origin of carpetbag
1820-1830 First recorded in 1820-30; carpet + bag
Dictionary.com
Examples from the Web for carpetbag
Historical Examples
When the boy got through, he cast a speculative glance at the carpetbag.
Brave and Bold
Horatio Alger
The boy shouldered the carpetbag and started in advance, Robert following.
Brave and Bold
Horatio Alger
I gave him my carpetbag to carry this morning, and he ran away with it.
Brave and Bold
Horatio Alger
He’s too honest entirely to stale the value of a pin, let alone a carpetbag.
Brave and Bold
Horatio Alger
For I read on your carpetbag, when we met in the orchard, ‘P. Bug.
The Tale of Mrs. Ladybug
Arthur Scott Bailey
And as he turned to leave her she looked closely at his carpetbag.
The Tale of Mrs. Ladybug
Arthur Scott Bailey
A traveller got out with his carpetbag in his hand, and was shown into the sanded parlour.
My Novel, Complete
Edward Bulwer-Lytton
In short, the post-chaise was ordered and the carpetbag packed.
The Caxtons, Complete
Edward Bulwer-Lytton
With a whoop of joy, he grabbed up his carpetbag and started for the Vermonter.
Frank Merriwell’s Son
Burt L. Standish
I stood with my shawl and carpetbag in hand, gazing doubtingly on the vehicle.
The Luck of Roaring Camp and Other Tales
Bret Harte
Anagram
bract gape
A bag crept
bag act peg
Today’s quote
We should be inspired by people… who show that human beings can be kind, brave, generous, beautiful, strong-even in the most difficult circumstances.
– Rachel Corrie
On this day
10 April 1815 – Indonesia’s Mount Tambora volcano begins a three month long eruption that lasted until 15 July 1815. It killed 71,000 people and affected the world’s climate for the next two years.
10 April 1912 – the ill-fated Titanic departs the port in Southampton, England bound for New York. On 14 April 1912, she hit an ice-berg and sank, killing more than 1,500 people.
10 April 1919 – death of Emiliano Zapata Salazar, Mexican revolutionary. Born 8 August 1879.
10 April 1979 – birth of Rachel Corrie, American peace activist. She was killed on 16 May 2003 when run over by an Israeli bulldozer that she was trying to stop from demolishing a Palestinian house in Gaza. Rachel was committed from an early age to human rights and caring for the poor as shown in this speech she gave in the fifth grade: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pDq32EgMxb8