English edit

Noun edit

armfull (plural armfulls or armsfull)

  1. Obsolete spelling of armful
    • 1812, Kate Mont Albion [pseudonym; Catharine Bayley], A Set-down at Court; [] In Four Volumes, volume I, London: [] Allen & Co., [], →OCLC, pages 30–31:
      [I]t was thus the passion of Mr. Panton allayed its overflowings: for very shortly after his marriage, he again fell passionately in love with another lady; a bona roba Queen, the full head taller than himself, and more than an armfull.
    • 1834, Trial of John R. Buzzell, the Leader of the Convent Rioters, for Arson and Burglary, Boston: Lemuel Gulliver, page 11:
      They then brought up a part of the board fence of the Convent lands, the fence wood was laid on the tar barrels, to make a bonfire, to raise an alarm of fire, and collect a greater number of people, there was a steady stream of people coming up with armsfull of the fence to feed the bonfire, I have no doubt that the tall man I saw is the prisoner at the bar.
    • 1840, R[ichard] H[enry] D[ana], Jr., chapter XXVI, in Two Years before the Mast. [] (Harper’s Family Library; no. CVI), New York, N.Y.: Harper & Brothers [], →OCLC, page 286:
      In this state of the weather, and before sunrise, in the grey of the morning, we had to wade off, nearly up to our hips in water, to load the skiff with the wood by armsfull.
    • 1848, United States Congressional Serial Set Volume 525: House of Representatives. Report No. 350., page 2:
      Therefore the Secretary of War (I remember he was a little man) went and fetched a large armfull of books, and looked, and did not find my father’s name; he went and fetched another armfull of books, and soon found my father’s name, and said if I was the only heir of my father, I could get the land.
    • 1857, Francis Bond Head, Descriptive Essays Contributed to the Quarterly Review, volume II, London: John Murray, page 297:
      While this interesting operation is proceeding, red postmen in waiting are carrying off in armfulls all approved letters to two other tables, at which, if possible with still greater celerity, their stamps are obliterated by the right-hands of twenty stampers, who from long practice in their regicidal duty can destroy from 6000 to 7000 Queen’s heads in an hour, or, for a short time, 140 per minute!
    • 1859, Mrs. Macleod Wylie, The Gospel in Burmah, page 324:
      “‘Just so. The world is God’s garden, and the people His flowers: white and yellow.’ But Mahnaht (the devil) comes in with his legion, and pulls them here—there—armfull after armfull, saying I’ll have all the red, and all the yellow, to keep my fires burning. But God says, “No! You shall not destroy my flowers.”’
    • 1863, Jemima von Tautphœus, “Chapter Xxi. More at Odds than Ever.”, in At Odds, Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co., page 198:
      Not only was the temple filled with French soldiers, but a clump of rose-trees and flowering shrubs had been torn up by the roots, to make a clear space for a large fire, the fuel for which was being carried in armsfull from the adjacent wood-house.
    • 1873, Harriet Grote, The Personal Life of George Grote., 2nd edition, London: John Murray, pages 120–121:
      Mrs. Grote to Sir William Molesworth, Bart., M.P. / Solothurn, 13th August, 1837. / [] “Mousing” in the “Buchhandlerungen” is the great pastime, lugging away armsfull of stuff to cram the carriage withal, to the dismay of poor “Henry,” who is at his wits’ end how to stow the same so as to leave room for “Mistress” to get in.
    • 1878, Harriet Beecher Stowe, “Dissolving Views”, in Poganuc People: Their Loves and Lives, New York, N.Y.: Fords, Howard, & Hulbert, →OCLC, pages 8–9:
      Oh, Nabby, Nabby! do tell me what they are doing up at your church. I’ve seen ’em all day carrying armfulls and armfulls—ever so much—spruce and pine up that way, and Jim Brace and Tom Peters told me they were going to have a ’lumination there, and when I asked what a ’lumination was they only laughed at me and called me a Presbyterian.
    • 1905, Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons, Parliamentary Papers, page 318:
      These little tenters are allowed to roam through the mill to collect the empty bobbins, carrying them in armfulls coming down the steps.