breastful

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From breast +‎ -ful.

Noun[edit]

breastful (plural breastfuls or breastsful)

  1. The amount that a breast will carry or hold.
    • 1900, Harrison S. Morris, In The Yule-Log Glow, Vol. IV (of IV)[1]:
      Enough for Him whom cherubim Worship night and day, A breastful of milk And a mangerful of hay; Enough for Him whom angels Fall down before, The ox and ass and camel Which adore.
    • 1906, Christina G. Rossetti, Poems[2]:
      Enough for Him whom cherubim Worship night and day, A breastful of milk And a mangerful of hay; Enough for Him whom angels Fall down before, The ox and ass and camel Which adore.
    • 1910, Algernon Blackwood, The Human Chord[3]:
      And again he inhaled a prodigious breastful of the mountain air. "
    • 1929 November, Robert Graves, chapter XII, in Good-bye to All That: An Autobiography, London: Jonathan Cape [], →OCLC, page 136:
      I had expected him to be a middle-aged man with a breastful of medals, with whom I would have to be formal; but Dunn was actually two months younger than myself.
    • 1947, J. F. Hendry, Fernie Brae: A Scottish Childhood, Polygon Books, published 1987, →ISBN, page 21:
      There were conjurers and singers and highland dancers wearing breastsful of medals, funny stories and recitations by blushing boys, and finally the choir again.

Anagrams[edit]