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bag
noun
a
container
made
of
paper
,
plastic
,
cloth
,
leather
,
or
other
flexible
material
,
used
for
carrying
or
storing
things
•
She
put
the
fresh
vegetables
into
her
canvas
bag
after
shopping
.
She
put
the
fresh
vegetables
into
her
canvas
bag
after
shopping
.
•
The
little
boy
carried
his
school
bag
proudly
on
the
first
day
of
class
.
The
little
boy
carried
his
school
bag
proudly
on
the
first
day
of
class
.
noun
a
loose
dark
swelling
under
the
eye
caused
by
tiredness
,
lack
of
sleep
,
or
age
(
usually
used
in
the
plural
as
bags
)
•
After
the
overnight
flight
,
he
had
noticeable
bags
under
his
eyes
.
After
the
overnight
flight
,
he
had
noticeable
bags
under
his
eyes
.
•
She
covered
the
slight
bags
beneath
her
eyes
with
makeup
.
She
covered
the
slight
bags
beneath
her
eyes
with
makeup
.
verb
-
bag
,
bagging
,
bags
,
bagged
to
put
something
into
a
bag
•
The
cashier
bagged
the
groceries
quickly
.
The
cashier
bagged
the
groceries
quickly
.
•
Please
bag
your
wet
clothes
separately
.
Please
bag
your
wet
clothes
separately
.
verb
-
bag
,
bagging
,
bags
,
bagged
to
catch
,
kill
,
win
,
or
obtain
something
,
especially
something
sought
after
or
valuable
•
She
bagged
the
last
ticket
to
the
concert
.
She
bagged
the
last
ticket
to
the
concert
.
•
The
striker
bagged
two
goals
in
the
final
.
The
striker
bagged
two
goals
in
the
final
.
verb
-
bag
,
bagging
,
bags
,
bagged
to
claim
or
reserve
something
for
yourself
by
saying
so
before
other
people
do
•
I
bag
the
front
seat
!
I
bag
the
front
seat
!
•
She
had
already
bagged
the
last
cupcake
before
he
could
reach
it
.
She
had
already
bagged
the
last
cupcake
before
he
could
reach
it
.
noun
the
total
number
of
animals
,
birds
,
or
fish
caught
or
killed
on
one
occasion
while
hunting
or
fishing
•
The
hunters'
bag
included
three
rabbits
and
a
pheasant
.
The
hunters'
bag
included
three
rabbits
and
a
pheasant
.
•
Our
fishing
bag
was
small
today
—
just
two
trout
.
Our
fishing
bag
was
small
today
—
just
two
trout
.
garbage
noun
-
garbage
waste
food
,
paper
,
or
other
unwanted
things
that
people
throw
away
•
The
kitchen
smelled
bad
because
the
garbage
hadn
’
t
been
taken
out
.
The
kitchen
smelled
bad
because
the
garbage
hadn
’
t
been
taken
out
.
•
Please
sort
the
recycling
before
putting
the
garbage
in
the
bin
.
Please
sort
the
recycling
before
putting
the
garbage
in
the
bin
.
From
late-Middle
English
,
probably
borrowed
from
Anglo-French
‘
garbage
’
meaning
offal
of
fowls
,
originally
‘
refuse
parts
’.
noun
-
garbage
something
that
is
worthless
,
silly
,
or
completely
wrong
•
Don
’
t
listen
to
his
story
—
it
’
s
complete
garbage
.
Don
’
t
listen
to
his
story
—
it
’
s
complete
garbage
.
•
The
reviewer
called
the
movie
garbage
and
told
people
to
save
their
money
.
The
reviewer
called
the
movie
garbage
and
told
people
to
save
their
money
.
Extended
figurative
sense
of
‘
worthless
talk
or
ideas
’
recorded
from
the
1920s
,
building
on
the
notion
of
physical
refuse
.
noun
-
garbage
meaningless
or
unwanted
data
in
computer
memory
or
program
output
•
A
programming
bug
filled
the
log
file
with
unreadable
garbage
.
A
programming
bug
filled
the
log
file
with
unreadable
garbage
.
•
If
you
don
’
t
initialize
variables
,
they
may
contain
random
garbage
values
.
If
you
don
’
t
initialize
variables
,
they
may
contain
random
garbage
values
.
Term
arose
in
early
computer
science
(
1960s
)
to
describe
random
data
left
in
memory
,
extending
the
idea
of
worthless
refuse
to
the
digital
realm
.