Suitcase, 1870 | A State Divided - For StudentsThis type of suitcase is called a “carpet bag” because it is made of pieces of carpet. Carpet bags were popular in the 1800s. They came in many different sizes, from small purses to large travel bags.
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The meaning of luggage is the same in most dictionaries: “suitcases or other bags in which to pack personal belongings for travel; something lugged; bags and suitcases that contain possessions you take with you when traveling,” and so on. Even a work backpack or computer briefcase can be called “luggage.”
There are two baggage types: Checked luggage and carry-on or also referred to as cabin/hand luggage. Personal belongings on board are referred to as hand luggage (cabin baggage), luggage delivered to an airline to be stored in an inaccessible area to the passenger during the flights is referred to as checked baggage.
In British English, the same kind of bag is called a sports bag. A holdall (or occasionally hold-all) may be a similar bag but may often have wheels and possibly a telescopic handle.
Also according to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word luggage originally meant inconveniently heavy baggage and comes from the verb lug and the suffix -age.
countable noun. A holdall is a strong bag which you use to carry your clothes and other things, for example when you are traveling. [mainly British]regional note: in AM, usually use carryall.
A waist bag, fanny pack, belt bag, moon bag, belly bag (American English), or bumbag (British English) is a small fabric pouch worn like a belt around the waist by use of a strap above the hips that is secured usually with some sort of buckle.
Large old-fashioned suitcases made of wood, leather and metal are called steamer trunks. Smaller handheld suitcases emerged at the end of the 19th century and were known as dress-suit cases. Find a range of suitcases and steamer trunks on 1stDibs.
Americans tend to call a belt bag a “fanny pack” while the British use the term “bum bag.” In the 1950s, the British trademarked the term “bum-bag” to reference the pouch that skiers would wear on the slopes.
John is correct, grip is a derivative of the grip sack. That is pretty descriptive of the form of the earliest luggage which seemed to be a bag with a wooded or rope type handle on the top. When the traveler held the wooden handle or the rope handle it closed the top and held the contents in.