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Mall aid
Answer for the clue "Mall aid", 4 letters:
tote
Alternative clues for the word tote
Mall carry-along
Carry-along
Shopper's bag
Schlep
Lug
Convey
Carryall
Kind of bag
Pari-mutuel
Handled baggage
___ bag
Carry
Package carrier
Canvas bag
Bag
Popular pledge drive gift
Haul
Carry-on
Shopper's convenience
Big bag
Pari-mutuel machine
Shopping bag
Bag with handles
Saks sack, say
Backpack alternative
Popular PBS pledge drive giveaway
Haul around
Gift for many a PBS donor
Pledge drive bag
___ board
Word with bag or board
Mall bag
A capacious bag or basket
Frequent gift for a PBS donation
Type of bag
Be armed with a six-shooter
Large handbag
Pack
___ bag (carryall)
Kind of board
Bear
Shoulder bag
Bag type
Bag opener
Shopping aid
Parimutuel recording device, for short
Bag or board preceder
Kind of board or bag
"___ dat barge!"
Carry by hand
Carry a burden
Transport
Kind of bag or box
Kind of bag or board
A load or haul
Word definitions for tote in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
verb COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES tote bag COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ NOUN gun ▪ He was toting the gun for a purpose - to shoot her through the head or knock her unconscious, or both. ▪ A small army of men toting machine guns stood at the gate, which...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Tote \Tote\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Toted ; p. pr. & vb. n. Toting .] [Said to be of African origin.] To carry or bear; as, to tote a child over a stream; to tote a gun on one's hip; -- a colloquial word originating in the Southern States, and used there...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
Etymology 1 n. 1 A bag, specifically a tote bag. 2 A heavy burden. vb. To carry or bear. Etymology 2 alt. To add up; to calculate a total. vb. To add up; to calculate a total. Etymology 3 n. (context British English) A pari-mutuel machine; a totalizator
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"to carry," 1670s, of unknown origin; originally attested in Virginia, but OED discounts the popular theory of its origin in a West African language (such as Kikongo tota "pick up," Kimbundu tuta "carry, load," related to Swahili tuta "pile up, carry")....
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a capacious bag or basket [syn: carryall , holdall , tote bag ]
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Tote may refer to:
Usage examples of tote.
She was an Olympic biathlete, and they kidnapped her and tried to make her, like, tote their water and all.
She was getting herself all done up for a man who insisted she travel down to see him sans underwear, and by his heated promise on the phone two nights ago, was going to tie her hand and foot and let her feel the touch of her very own bright blue flogger that now lay at the bottom of the tartan tote bag.
And I am glad that I allowed you to enter Totes, Ran Kirving, if only to remind me that suffering is never unique.
The two of them were toting flowers, and an elaborate layette, all fancy crocheting and white satin bows.
Long long ago -- Brauxel counts on his fingers -- when the world was in the third year of the war, when Paulchen had been left behind in Masuria, Lorchen was roaming about with the dog, but miller Matern was permitted to go on toting bags of flour, because he was hard of hearing on both sides, Grandma Matern sat one sunny day, while a child was being baptized -- the pocketknife-throwing youngster of earlier morning shifts was receiving the name Walter -- riveted to her chair, rolling her eyeballs, bubbling and drooling but unable to compose one word.
The general manager of a Rotisserie team measured his success by toting up batting averages, RBIs, stolen bases, and so on.
King, but William Bohun happily drank with men like Skeat and Tote- sham, ate with them, spoke English with them, hunted with them and trusted them, and Sir Simon felt excluded from that friendship.
Covenant plasma rifles and pistols, which, thanks to their light weight, and the fact that there was no need to tote additional ammo, left the swabbies free to carry tools, food, and medical supplies.
He gathered both plates and the silverware, toting dishes to the kitchen.
Tony watched as the girl emerged from the front door of the house, toting a backpack, a diaper bag, and the baby.
Four passengers emerged, tanned and cheerful, toting their luggage past the hangar to a waiting limousine.
Well, I could see it all working out for Willie Wong and Rupert Cornwall a lot easier than it all working out for me, so me and the Lord decided that it was time to take matters into our own hands, and what we did was this: I went out shopping at a bunch of costume jewelry stores, and when I finally came to a fake emerald about the size of the lump of coal I was toting around in the little cloth bag, I bought it for twenty pounds and tucked it away in my pocket.
Harvey, surrounded by a bunch of kids who all wanted his autograph, started toting the rickshaw there, with me and Lo Chung and a few hundred betters tagging along behind.
He goes on around the house, toting it in both arms like a armful of wood, it overlapping him on both ends, head and tail.
She kin marry dat yaller wretch, but Ah means fuh her tuh tote uh sore back when he gits uh.