Suitcase in a sentence as a noun

You need a suitcase of clothes, a computer and, well, that's about it.

We need to check a few things up, this will take much ******* time can it take to check a stupid suitcase and a handbag>.

It "prevents" me from packing a suitcase and leaving town, but again, I enjoy the tinkering.

A network cable is always in my suitcase and my laptop can run as an access point for my other devices.

I learnt Z80 ASM on a suitcase instructional computer, turning fans on and off or stepping through traffic light sequences on LEDs.

My own experience from living out of a max 20kg suitcase is that owning too few things forces you to think about things a lot more than you would like to.

Because once the train leaves San Antonio you'll be wanting to begin maneuvering yourself and your suitcase near an exit.

Saying that you have a suitcase full of collectable pins that you intend to trade with a guy for $1500 would probably not get you into the US either.

Not to rehash an old argument, but you don't blame suitcase manufacturers for making suitcases that criminals use for convenient cash lockboxes.

If you suck at being magically positioned, lug your luggage through the aisle of one of the other cars and hope that you find a couple of adjacent seats and that someone doesn't come along who needs the seat so you have to take your suitcase off it.

It was a bare metal recovery type differential backup, the backups were aged rationally, and the machines were woken up in the middle of the night to perform the backup, but laptops would only do this if they were plugged into AC so you wouldn't wake up a laptop in a suitcase and drain the battery and burn up the machine because it had no cooling airspace.

Suitcase definitions

noun

a portable rectangular container for carrying clothes; "he carried his small bag onto the plane with him"

See also: grip