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"bindle" Definitions
  1. a bundle of clothes or bedding

44 Sentences With "bindle"

How to use bindle in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bindle" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bindle". Mastering all the usages of "bindle" from sentence examples published by news publications.

You remember the little bindle that hobos used to have?
Let the gold trickle down into our awaiting bindle sticks. AMEN!
Was it the cartoon soul caring the bindle that convinced you?
Custom was the only option, and Bindle and Keep was the only company they considered.
A backpack is too bulky, a purse too easy to lose, and a bindle might be just a little too boho.
When he opened Bindle & Keep, a bespoke tailoring company in Brooklyn, Daniel Friedman expected to make suits for Wall Street types.
"I sort of assumed I was just going to pack up a bindle sack and start roaming the earth," he said.
GUTFELD: You know, we were always told that Trump -- it&aposs true, there was never anything you could put in the bindle.
Ms. Beresford wore an aubergine suit by Bindle & Keep, a Brooklyn company that specializes in suits for queer and gender nonconforming people.
The documentary, showing Monday night on HBO, is about the customers and the paths that brought them to the company, Bindle & Keep in Park Slope.
Lifting the top lid off the toilet, I desperately peeled away little pieces of tape that were glued to the bindle hiding the oxy and the eight ball.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads I'm just a skyscraper-sized skeleton rambling across the United States, a bindle of tall tales and true stories on my shoulder.
Smith's lumpy and knotted fabric bundles, which call to mind a homeless person's bindle, don't try to salvage or redeem excess textiles so much as accentuate their abjection.
Bound with rope, the crude bindle — twin bed, plaid bedspread, sports equipment, suit coat, and ties — plays on the various meanings of belonging using the language of itinerant movement.
The text, set in period typography, is illustrated with a drawing of a man on the run with his bindle, suggesting at the same time an artist on the run from the past.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads SANTA FE, New Mexico — To the uninitiated, the phrase "tramp art" probably evokes a stereotypical hobo, train hopping with a cartoonish bindle or drinking moonshine around a fire pit.
Kickstarter is featuring the self-cleaning LARQ bottle (formerly known as Quartz), bottle, which uses UV-C LED light to purify water, and Bindle, a vacuum-sealed container that stores keys, earbuds and other small objects.
"Suited" doesn't completely dispel the impression that it's an elaborate free advertisement for Bindle & Keep — there are no dissatisfied customers here — and there's a gentrified-Brooklyn feel to this particular take on the struggles of gender nonconforming individuals.
Caitlin Elfring and Shamisa Zvoma in Bindle and Keep Caitlin Elfring (left) and Shamisa Zvoma both wanted to wear suits on their wedding day, but they also knew how difficult it could be to find something off the rack.
Many who died had, like the "Suited" clients, long felt marginalized, and for L.G.B.T. Americans, the massacre has become a symbol of the violence and hidden hatreds that are part of everyday life, while also accentuating the importance of safe spaces like Bindle & Keep.
"'Suited' doesn't completely dispel the impression that it's an elaborate free advertisement for Bindle & Keep — there are no dissatisfied customers here — and there's a gentrified-Brooklyn feel to this particular take on the struggles of gender-nonconforming individuals," Neil Genzlinger writes in The New York Times, noting that prices are never discussed.
Two hobos walking along railroad tracks after being put off a train. One is carrying a bindle. A bindle is the bag, sack, or carrying device stereotypically used by the American sub-culture of hobos. A "bindlestiff" was another name for a hobo who carried a bindle.
Bindle had previously defeated longtime MLA Steve Ashton as part of his party's landslide victory in the 2016 election. Bindle was only the second Tory ever to win the seat, and the first since 1977.
The bindle is colloquially known as the "blanket stick", particularly within the Northeastern hobo community. A "bindlestiff", according to James Blish in his novel, A Life for the Stars, was about a hobo who stole another hobo's "bindle," hence the colloquium "stiff" as in steal. In modern popular culture the bindle is portrayed as a stick with cloth or a blanket tied around one end for carrying items, with the entire array being carried over the shoulder. This transferred force to the shoulder, which allowed a longer-lasting and comfortable grip, especially with larger heavier loads.
Particularly in cartoons, the bindles' sacks usually have a polka-dot or bandanna design. However, in actual use the bindle can take many forms. One example of the stick-type bindle can be seen in the illustration entitled The Runaway created by Norman Rockwell for the cover of the September 20, 1958, edition of The Saturday Evening Post. Though bindles are rarely used anymore, they are still widely seen in popular culture as a prevalent anachronism.
This style of purse is called a hobo bag because it resembles the shape of the bindle on a stick that hobos are portrayed as carrying over their shoulder in drawings and cartoons.
Two hobos walking along railroad tracks after being put off a train. One is carrying a bindle. A hobo is a migrant worker or homeless vagrant, especially one who is impoverished. The term originated in the Western—probably Northwestern—United States around 1890.
Although Jenkins is best known for his light fiction, his first book was a biography of George Borrow. He was an admirer of the poet and visual artist William Blake and conducted research into his trial for high treason and the location of his lost grave, (Subscription required for online access) writing a book on him in 1925. His most popular fictional creation was Mr. Joseph Bindle, who first appeared in a humorous novel in 1916 and in a number of sequels. In the preface to the books, T. P. O'Connor said that "Bindle is the greatest Cockney that has come into being through the medium of literature since Dickens wrote Pickwick Papers".
Industrial Worker. 20 Apr 1911: 3. Industrial Workers of the World 1916 advertisement for "stickerettes" Professor Eric Margolis has written about the history of such media, > Wobbly organizers were revolutionary fish swimming in the sea of bindle > stiffs and tramp workers. The Wobbly card was a ticket to ride the rails.
One of the written plots saw characters die in an IRA bombing. However, the plots never came to fruition, as Gibbon was demoted and then resigned from the serial. He is also the deviser and adaptor, with David Yallop, of Herbert Jenkins's Bindle book series. Gibbon married Moya McCarthy in July 1976 and they have a daughter, Sophie.
The riding's character is primarily working-class, with 17% of its economy coming from the mining sector. Forty-two per cent of the riding's residents are aboriginal, the third highest rate in the province. Thompson is usually considered safe for the New Democratic Party, which represented the riding almost continually since its creation. The current MLA, New Democrat Danielle Adams defeated Progressive Conservative Kelly Bindle in the 2019 election.
Ashton resigned from cabinet on December 22, 2014 in order to challenge Selinger in the 2015 Manitoba NDP leadership election. He returned to cabinet in April 2015 as Minister of Infrastructure and Transportation and Minister responsible for emergency measures. Ashton's 35-year streak as a member of the legislature end on April 19, 2016 when he was defeated by Progressive Conservative candidate Kelly Bindle in the 2016 provincial election.
Pooch (now wearing shoes and a hat) is a penniless vagabond wandering the countryside, and carrying a bindle. On his way, he comes across his sweetheart the girl coonhound (now having lighter fur) who is milking a cow. After they greet each other, Pooch sings the song A Great Big Bunch of You. Moments later, an old dog, who is the girl coonhound's employer, shows up and isn't happy to see him.
The term bindle may descend from the German word Bündel, meaning something wrapped up in a blanket and bound by cord for carrying (cf. originally Middle Dutch bundle), or have arisen as a portmanteau of "bind" and "spindle". More recently, the term has come to be used to define packages of illegal drugs, particularly heroin, in which it typically refers to ten single 'bags' bound together with a rubber band, although this is more commonly called a bundle.
Twelve-year-old Albert Perkins and the elderly Mr. Bindle watch for the pigeons. During one of the many nighttime air raids against London, Mitch meets Jennifer Carson, a teletype operator at the Ministry of Information. They seek shelter in the Tube and become acquainted. The Consolidated offices (and all the teletype machines) are destroyed in the raid, but Mitch obtains the services of Jennifer and a teletype machine from Duffield, a Ministry of Information official.
Lilian Mary Oldland (7 February 1903 – 29 September 1984) was an English actress who appeared in more than twenty films between 1925 and 1935. Born in Gloucester in 1903, she made her film debut in The Secret Kingdom and was soon cast as a regular in the Bindle Series of films. In 1930 she changed her name to Mary Newland and was credited as that thereafter. She made her last film, The Silent Passenger, in 1935.
Images from the Tarocchi de Mantegna, accessed April 9, 2008. A similar image is contained in the German Hofämterspiel; there the fool (German: Narr) is depicted as a barefoot man in robes, apparently with bells on his hood, playing a bagpipe.Hofämterspiel images, accessed April 9, 2008. The Tarot of Marseilles and related decks similarly depict a bearded person wearing what may be a jester's hat; he always carries a bundle of his belongings on a stick (called a bindle) slung over his back.
A narrator recalls the character Paul Bunyan and his exploits, and states that many people still question the giant's existence. The narrator then advises the viewer to ask "a certain rabbit" whether the giant is real. Just then Bugs Bunny comes walking by, toting a bindle and singing "Jimmy Crack Corn". Bugs comments on the "funny- looking trees" he passes, oblivious to the fact that they are abnormally large asparagus, and to the fact that he has entered a rather large vegetable garden.
Speedy Gonzales, "the fastest mouse in all Mexico", is living in the "fine hacienda of José Álvaro Meléndez" in an unnamed "big city" in Mexico where fellow resident Sylvester the Cat (dubbed "Sylverro Gato" here) is "the most pooped cat in all Mexico" from his futile attempts to catch Speedy. He eats pep pills for energy to catch the mouse, to no effect. Their pursuit is interrupted when Speedy's country cousin, Slowpoke Rodriguez, knocks on the door. Taller, thinner, and slower talking than Speedy, Slowpoke arrives carrying a bindle stick and singing "La Cucaracha".
During one difficult interval of homesteading, Gibbons began foraging for local plants and berries to supplement the family diet. After leaving home at 15, he drifted throughout the Southwest, finding work as a dairyman, carpenter, trapper, gold panner, and cowboy. The early years of the Dust Bowl era found Gibbons in California, where he lived as a self-described “bindle stiff” (hobo) and, in sympathy with labor causes, began writing Communist Party leaflets. Later in the 1930s he settled in Seattle, served a stint in the Army, married, and worked as a carpenter, surveyor, and boatbuilder.
A more globular wonton can be formed by folding all four corners together, resulting in a shape reminiscent of a stereotypical hobo's bindle made by tying all four corners of a cloth together. A related kind of wonton is made by using the same kind of wrapper, but applying only a minute amount of filling (frequently meat) and quickly closing the wrapper-holding hand, sealing the wonton into an unevenly squashed shape. These are called xiao huntun (literally "little wonton") and are invariably served in a soup, often with condiments such as pickles, ginger, sesame oil, and cilantro (coriander leaves).
After the farmhand posse passes, and just as Father is recovering with the help of Millie and a passerby at the waterfall, the gypsy emerges from the barrel and bids the jilted Martha a hasty and perfunctory farewell. The posse eventually catch up with the gypsy back at the fortuneteller's wagon, where they warn him in no uncertain terms to leave town, which he does with a bindle over his shoulder. The dejected Martha, sitting on some wooden steps leading up from the road, looks up to find the posse marching the gypsy out of town. She wanders off to the vegetable patch where she finds solace in the arms of the lanky farmhand she had rejected earlier.
Seven-year-old Johnny is excited about what he believes to be a vacation at his grandmother's Georgia plantation with his parents, Sally and John Sr. When they arrive at the plantation, he discovers that his parents will be living apart temporarily, and he will live at the plantation with his mother and grandmother while his father returns to Atlanta to continue his controversial editorship of that city's newspaper. Distraught at his father's departure, Johnny secretly leaves for Atlanta that night with only a bindle. As Johnny sneaks away from the plantation, he is attracted by the voice of Uncle Remus telling tales of a character named Br'er Rabbit. By this time, word had gotten out that Johnny was missing, and some plantation residents are looking for him.
Still, as with all the evidence in this > investigation, I vetted the allegation with an open mind. Over the months > since then, as more and more information surfaced, including a videotape > from County Jail where the discovery of the drug took place, I came to > believe that it wasn't just possible, but probable that someone in law > enforcement — perhaps Officer Beutel — had intentionally planted that bindle > of black tar heroin at the feet of the DUI suspect, causing the District > Attorney's Office to charge her on additional charges beyond driving under > the influence. On December 5, 2012, the Santa Barbara City Council voted to spend $208,000 to install video cameras in 27 Santa Barbara Police Department patrol cars. The move came after the recommendation of the Santa Barbara County Grand Jury in October, 2011 following Lance's first series in which he reported for the first time that the SBPD was the largest police agency in the county without onboard video in patrol units; a factor that can lead to misconduct in DUI arrests. PDF.

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