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ALL meanings of bundle up

bun·dle up
B b
  • phrasal verb bundle up If you bundle up a mass of things, you make them into a bundle by gathering or tying them together. 3
  • phrasal verb bundle up If you bundle up, you dress in a lot of warm clothes, usually because the weather is very cold. If you bundle someone up, you dress them in a lot of warm clothes. 3
  • verb bundle up to dress (somebody) warmly and snugly 3
  • verb bundle up to make (something) into a bundle or bundles, esp by tying 3
  • noun bundle up to put on plenty of warm clothing 3
  • noun bundle up several objects or a quantity of material gathered or bound together: a bundle of hay. 1
  • noun bundle up an item, group, or quantity wrapped for carrying; package. 1
  • noun bundle up a number of things considered together: a bundle of ideas. 1
  • noun bundle up Slang. a great deal of money: He made a bundle in the market. 1
  • noun bundle up Botany. an aggregation of strands of specialized conductive and mechanical tissues. 1
  • noun bundle up Also called bundle of isoglosses. Dialect Geography. a group of close isoglosses running in approximately the same direction, especially when taken as evidence of an important dialect division. 1
  • noun bundle up Anatomy, Zoology. an aggregation of fibers, as of nerves or muscles. 1
  • verb with object bundle up to tie together or wrap in a bundle: Bundle the newspapers for the trash man. 1
  • verb with object bundle up to send away hurriedly or unceremoniously (usually followed by off, out, etc.): They bundled her off to the country. 1
  • verb with object bundle up to offer or supply (related products or services) in a single transaction at one all-inclusive price. 1
  • transitivephrasal verb bundle up wrap together 1
  • verb without object bundle up to leave hurriedly or unceremoniously (usually followed by off, out, etc.): They indignantly bundled out of the meeting. 1
  • intransitivephrasal verbs bundle up dress warmly 1
  • verb without object bundle up (especially of sweethearts during courtship in early New England) to lie in the same bed while fully clothed, as for privacy and warmth in a house where an entire family shared one room with a fireplace. 1
  • idioms bundle up drop one's bundle, Australian and New Zealand Slang. to lose confidence or hope. 1
  • verb bundle up (Intransitive Verb) To put on warm clothes. 0
  • verb bundle up (Transitive Verb) To put into a bundle. 0
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