20 Words to use with luggage

In all, there were about a dozento put a familiar figuretoo small or too fragile to share the dangers of the luggage-van.

Everyone is flying about writing luggage labels, and getting their boxes up from the hold, and counting things.

He had, in fact, appeared under the window of my compartment, offering himself as a luggage carrier and had been close behind me when my late travelling companion walked by my side.

""Well, if I were you, I would not, really; the engine might blow up, or you might run into a luggage train.

At any rate, it is no pleasure to them to leave their village in order to become luggage-porters or beaters of roads on fatiguing marches in impracticable districts, and to camp out in the open air under every deprivation.

And when Monsieur le Comte de Lorgnes had wavered through the gateway in tow of a luggage-laden porter; and Dupont had torn himself away from his fond familiar and lurched after the count; and Lanyard, after a little wait, had followed in turn: he was able to see for himself that Dupont had contrived to be berthed in the same carriage with de Lorgnes; proving that he did not mean to let the count out of sight, day or night.

He pulled Cary into No. 4, shut the door, and pointed to a small wooden knob set a few inches below the luggage rack.

It is advisable, when people are travelling as a party, that they should have their luggage all weighed together, presenting the whole of the tickets at the same time; this not only frequently saves expense, but, as the number of persons is marked by the luggage clerk on their baggage receipt, it is a guarantee that each has bought a ticket, which saves trouble if one should happen to be lost.

"I went to the station, Wilkinson," he said, "and in the lost luggage office I found Mr. Mills's bag.

In fact, the actor had gone into the luggage vanhow I trembled for Kinko!and there, with Popof's assistance, had got out of one of his boxes a somewhat free-and-easy costume, but one certain of success at a wedding: A primrose coat with metal buttons, and a buttonhole, a sham diamond pin in the cravat, poppy-colored breeches, copper buckles, flowered waistcoat, clouded stockings, thread gloves, black pumps, and white beaver hat.

Far ahead, like hounds in full cry, toiled the unwilling luggage bearers.

" "What?" "Her luggage wasna in the van.

In five days after we came to Veuslima, upon the river Witzedga; from thence we came to Lawrenskoy, on the third of July, where, providing ourselves with two luggage boats, and a convenient bark, we embarked the seventh, and arrived at Archangel the eighteenth, after a year, five months, and three days journey, including the eight months and odd days at Tobolski.

The men rode together in advance of the carriages and the luggage carts.

The dear girl never asked for my college certificate and my luggage check, but I have them all here.

When Adam Smith asserted that of all sorts of luggage man was the most difficult to move, he forgot woman!

We rode down the beautiful valley, taking the road to Sebaste (Samaria), while our luggage-mules kept directly over the mountains to Jenin.

I only remembered that here was some one to whom I could talk, and in two minutes this handsome Russian had untangled my incoherent explanations, had taken our luggage receipt, and had assured us that he himself would not pause until he had seen our trunks taken from the train at Vilna.

"We'll stick these things in the left-luggage spot, dine here in the station, and go straight to the concert.

It was a pelting snow-storm, and the luggage-ticketing had to be performed al fresco, which, combined with the total want of order so prevalent in the railway establishments in this country, made it anything but an agreeable operation.

20 Words to use with  luggage