The Collaborative International Dictionary
Basketful \Bas"ket*ful\, n.; pl. Basketfuls. As much as a basket will contain.
Wiktionary
n. (plural of basketful English)
Usage examples of "basketfuls".
Every year his pear tree produced four basketfuls of fruit which had to be given to the king, a greedy ruler who grew rich at the expense of the poor.
The poor man was beside himself with fear, for the king refused to take less than four basketfuls, and the peasant would be cruelly punished.
On Friday afternoon great basketfuls of buns and cakes were taken into the schools, and great pitchers of milk, the school children had what they wanted.
For more than twenty years the poor woman had never, for a single day, failed to throw upon her garden three or four basketfuls of richer soil, which she was obliged to bring more than half a league.
When a boat brought a cargo of coal to Wurzburg, coal could only be sold in retail during the first eight days, each family being entitled to no more than fifty basketfuls.
Princess Maria will take her there and show them to her, and they will chatter their three basketfuls in their woman's way.
I saw myself exposing the criminal ring, arresting the criminals, carrying back basketfuls of papyri to Walter.
Martha several basketfuls of crabs, snails, grasshoppers, and locusts, which proved to be the ordinary provision of the natives.
Great quantities of bronze tools have been found in different parts of England,— sometimes in heaps, as if they had been thrown away in basketfuls as things of little value.
All they asked in return was help with hunting, some food, and a few basketfuls of the heavy rock from the streams that they showed us how to find.