Advertisement

Advertisement

drawerful

[ drawr-fool ]

noun

, plural draw·er·fuls.
  1. an amount sufficient to fill a drawer:

    a drawerful of socks.



Discover More

Spelling Note

See -ful.
Discover More

Word History and Origins

Origin of drawerful1

First recorded in 1820–30; drawer + -ful
Discover More

Example Sentences

“Planned obsolescence” is the name of the game in consumer electronics, but you don’t have to accept a drawerful of fraying headphone cords and power cables as your destiny.

“Planned obsolescence” is the name of the game in consumer electronics, but you don’t have to accept a drawerful of fraying headphone cords and power cables as your destiny.

She’s been hooked on shapewear since giving birth nearly 30 years ago, she said, and has a drawerful ranging “from cheapies at Walmart to the more expensive ones at Nordstrom.”

How one day, you look around to discover you’ve got a cupboard crammed with mismatched food storage, a drawerful of socks you never wear and more than two dozen Democratic presidential candidates?

The converse is seen in places such as the Netherlands and Denmark: while “cyclists” – people who have a drawerful of Lycra and an interest in gear ratios – do exist, they’re a different breed from the mass of everyday transport riders, who in socioeconomic terms encompass more or less everyone from royalty downwards.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


drawerdrawers