stockingful

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

stocking +‎ -ful

Noun[edit]

stockingful (plural stockingfuls or stockingsful)

  1. the amount that can fit in a stocking
    • 1907, Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch, Merry-Garden and Other Stories[1]:
      For, outside of a stockingful of guineas, all her capital was sunk in Merry-Garden, and all Merry-Garden hung now on the boy's life.
    • 1993, Tom Flynn, The Trouble with Christmas, page 47:
      On a very deep level, then, they are one: the pint-sized demon at your door Halloween night who (formally, at least) exchanges his or her forbearance from soaping your windows for a handful of candy, and the jolly old elf who is imagined to slither down the chimney and exchange a hurried snack for stockingsful of joy — or judgment.
    • 2005 December 9, Brian Nemtusak, “Screw X-Mas”, in Chicago Reader[2]:
      More talent show than bona fide production, Sweetback Productions' stockingful of hit-or-miss fare would be most at home at a holiday party in an actor's apartment--an impression that the climb to a crow's-nest studio only amplifies.