kit and caboodle

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From kit +‎ boodle.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (file)

Noun[edit]

kit and caboodle

  1. Everything entirely, the whole lot. [from 1870s][1]
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:everything
    • 1930, Kenneth Roberts, Arundel, published 1995, page 153:
      [] There′ll be a kit and caboodle of our people waiting to set out."
    • 1951, Holling Clancy Holling, Minn of the Mississippi, published 1979, page 65:
      Aye, you could sell your kit and caboodle, and really see New Orleans!
    • 1988, Susan DeMarco, Jim Hightower, A Populist Prescription for Prosperity: Mother Jones, page 56:
      To have an economy that is sound and that works for all the people, Reagan′s entire “trickle-down” kit and caboodle must be tossed out behind him and replaced with an aggressive program of growth that “percolates up” from the grass roots.

Adverb[edit]

kit and caboodle (not comparable)

  1. (US) All together; as one.
    • 1954, Gordon Allport, cited in 2005, Steven J. Bartlett, The Pathology Of Man: A Study Of Human Evil, page 243,
      If I can put the Catholics into another category and reject them kit and caboodle, my life is further simplified.
    • 2000 October, Working Mother, page 132:
      Lincoln moved its corporate headquarters, kit and caboodle, from Fort Wayne, Indiana, to Philadelphia in 1998.
    • 2009, Scharlie R. Martin, Mayhem and Mischief Most Foul, page 161:
      After burying Hiram she packed them up kit and caboodle and moved them to Tuskegee, the nearest big city, so she could find work.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “kit and caboodle”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.