English to English
noun
- a flexible container with a single opening
He stuffed his laundry into a large bag.
source: WordNet 3.0
- the quantity of game taken in a particular period (usually by one person)
His bag included two deer.
source: WordNet 3.0
- a place that the runner must touch before scoring
He scrambled to get back to the bag.
source: WordNet 3.0
- a container used for carrying money and small personal items or accessories (especially by women)
She reached into her bag and found a comb.
source: WordNet 3.0
- the quantity that a bag will hold
He ate a large bag of popcorn.
source: WordNet 3.0
- a portable rectangular container for carrying clothes
He carried his small bag onto the plane with him.
source: WordNet 3.0
- an ugly or ill-tempered woman
He was romancing the old bag for her money.
source: WordNet 3.0
- mammary gland of bovids (cows and sheep and goats)
source: WordNet 3.0
- an activity that you like or at which you are superior
Chemistry is not my cup of tea.
His bag now is learning to play golf.
Marriage was scarcely his dish.
source: WordNet 3.0
- A sack or pouch, used for holding anything; as, a bag of meal or of money.
source: Webster 1913
verb
- capture or kill, as in hunting
Bag a few pheasants.
source: WordNet 3.0
- hang loosely, like an empty bag
source: WordNet 3.0
- bulge out; form a bulge outward, or be so full as to appear to bulge
source: WordNet 3.0
- take unlawfully
source: WordNet 3.0
- put into a bag
The supermarket clerk bagged the groceries.
source: WordNet 3.0
- To put into a bag; as, to bag hops.
source: Webster 1913
- To swell or hang down like a full bag; as, the skin bags from containing morbid matter.
source: Webster 1913
English to Tagalog
noun
- [bag] Bayong; supot
source: Diccionario Ingles-Espaņol-Tagalog
verb
- [bag] Magsilid sa bayong ķ sa supot
source: Diccionario Ingles-Espaņol-Tagalog
Tagalog to English
English Definition: (noun) bag, handbag, totebag
source: Large Tagalog Dictionary