Duffel in a sentence as a noun

And that's when we'd be looking for the black duffel bags.

Grab a duffel bag and throw in a couple sandbags. Put it on your shoulders and trudge up and down the stairs until you can't anymore.

You can copy someone's individual ideas and add them to you own duffel. But you have to sign up first, of course.

I arrived in 1993 with a duffel bag and about $1000, and proceeded to make a life there. The learning curve was steep, but it was wonderful.

The AP[1] is reporting the bombs were in black duffel bags containing 6ltr pressure cookers. Make people look for them instead of "anything suspicious".

There's a story that when they sold them at Macworld Boston, Rob V. flew back with a duffel bag full of cash proceeds... They were really big on employee perks, like costco runs, but then again we were frequently there until 2am.

I agree, walking in with a duffel bag of cash is not going to work. On the other hand, why not buy a "decent" project car for cash from a private citizen, then spend cash at car shops upgrading it to a quite nice hot rod?

Also, qood question: "why is it called duffel". We thought that a duffel bag is a place where you throw random stuff in when you travel or going places, and our "duffel" is place for you to collect your ideas of where to go, what to do while you're traveling.

I always use a medium-sized duffel bag and a small backpack when going "carryon-only" for a long flight. The non-rigid bag makes it easier to stow and remove, making the whole system move a **** of a lot faster.

But she also suggested I put an image of a duffel bag with smiley faces on it, so I can't tell whether she was serious. Anyway, I agree we should show and not tell, hence the ability to create a trip without signing up.

Let's say I show up at your office with a duffel bag filled with $1M cash ... and I said to you, snowwrestler 'I'm now going to make a bunch of nasty and insulting comments to you ...

In my jurisdiction, if they can establish intent to burglarize -- ie, you're also carrying an empty duffel bag, a crowbar, and a map with the bank circled on it -- its a class II felony. I repeat; I am not a lawyer.

Perhaps this could be combined this with the information below and we could search pictures taken prior to the blast for black duffel bags that might contain 6 quart pressure cookers.

In the real world, running out the door with a bunch of duffel bags and people shouting tends to attract a lot of attention and make escape a lot harder than closing a network connection.

Every time my sister comes back to the states she brings two gigantic duffel bags and stocks up on clothing. The prices on anything else you want/need to buy like electronics, computers, cars, or bicycles are insane compared to the USA. Or even Japan, which isn't a country known for bargain prices.

> The thought of someone trying to stuff some of these items into a duffel bag was hilarious as well as the idea that someone felt it necessary to warn people about these prohibited items. Did you say "oh wow, I was laughing at that poster because who needs to be told not to bring a machete onto a plane?"

I was curious as to why it is called "duffel" in part because a duffel bag conjures up a very different kind of trip image for me than the one the site itself gave me images of. The site itself suggests to me "people with money booking hotels". In contrast, a duffel bag conjures up images of someone hitch hiking to where they want to go, sleeping in hostels or couchsurfing or camping out...

Killing someone and locking them up in a duffel bag in a hotel bathroom doesn't seem British governments style. Before claiming the victim was another Snowden/whistleblower, you might want to read this excerpt from the article: "The source indicated that Williams' work to disrupt the Russian mafia could have put him at risk"."

Having to keep everything in a bag I can tote around leaves me feeling kind of uneasy and like the situation is impermanent, much like staying somewhere and living out of a duffel bag. I'm a lot more inclined to do good work if it's for a company I feel like I'm at home at, that I'm going to stay at, than one that feels like I'll be gone from any moment now.

Furthermore, the Surveyor 3 camera was returned from the Moon in a nylon duffel bag, and was not in the type of sealed airtight metal container used to return lunar samples in the early Apollo missions. It is therefore possible that it was contaminated by the astronauts and the environment in the Apollo 12 capsule itself.

The thought of someone trying to stuff some of these items into a duffel bag was hilarious as well as the idea that someone felt it necessary to warn people about these prohibited items. Right away I saw a blue-shirted supervisor whisper to one of the checkpoint gropers and when it was my turn, I was pulled aside for 'additional' screening with more than one groper participating and more whispering between the gropers and the supervisor.

Duffel definitions

noun

a large cylindrical bag of heavy cloth; for carrying personal belongings

See also: duffle

noun

a coarse heavy woolen fabric

See also: duffle