cabinful
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]cabinful (plural cabinfuls or cabinsful)
- The amount that fits in a cabin.
- 1991, John Caldwell, Desperate Voyage, →ISBN, page 156:
- Nine people make a cabinful on a twentynine-footer!
- 2004, Jenny Carroll, Meg Cabot, Code Name Cassandra, →ISBN, page 14:
- "It's just that, of all our female counselors this year," Pamela was going on, "you really strike me as the one most capable of handling a cabinful of little boys. And you scored so well in your first aid and lifesaving courses — "
- 2012, Jack Lasenby, Aunt Effie's Ark, →ISBN:
- Then how do you like having a cabinful of gorillas on the deck above you?
- 2015, Emily Foster, The Ohio Frontier: An Anthology of Early Writings, →ISBN, page 139:
- While Fortescue Cuming could entertain a cabinful of young men with a violin in 1807, Frances Trollope noted that Cincinnatians organized formal balls for young people of quality twenty years later.