Satchel

హ్యాండ్ బేగ్
definition
noun
All exercises are done in the classroom itself so that children are relaxed at home and need not carry satchels stuffed with heavy loads of textbooks and exercise books.
a bag carried on the shoulder by a long strap and typically closed by a flap.
translation of 'satchel'
హ్యాండ్ బేగ్,
భుజానికి తగిలించుకొను సంచి
example
The man carried a small 'satchel' on his back full to the brim with goods, but this year there were no customers.
Mrs Barley opened her handbag, a brown leather affair like a small 'satchel' .
Tara just looked at his face while Rob started to open his 'satchel' and take out a small sketch book.
Martin went round in circles clutching his carrier bag of clothes in one hand and his leather 'satchel' of papers in the other.
We sat down at the table in the lounge and that's when he handed me the 'satchel' he was carrying.
At one point Marcos asked her to show everyone what she had in her 'satchel' .
His clothes were rags, as was the 'satchel' he carried, and he was boarding the third class plank.
I was starting to get cabin fever and I quickly got up, gathering my books into my 'satchel' .
He had his 'satchel' under one arm and the phone clutched in the opposite hand.
Jim had been laid up for months and still carried a 'satchel' full of medications.
I slung my 'satchel' over my shoulder and shook her outstretched hand.
They didn't speak for some time, until Faimon closed the book, and put it into his 'satchel' .
All exercises are done in the classroom itself so that children are relaxed at home and need not carry 'satchels' stuffed with heavy loads of textbooks and exercise books.
Now, the police are taking things a step further, and have set up airport-style tables to inspect random shopping bags and 'satchels' .
He had stuffed his mother's old dishtowels into the 'satchels' to keep the cans from banging together.
They swept their toys, papers, and supplies into their 'satchels' , and walked towards the building.
Bits and pieces of color were noticeable on the 'satchels' but that was it.
What freedom can we Indians boast of when thousands of children can be seen rattling in garbage dumps instead of carrying 'satchels' to school?
Manono is a car-free, sandy-bayed idyll, where school children saunter with their 'satchels' under swaying palm trees, wandering the round-island footpath.
White-coated show members with 'satchels' hanging from their shoulders collect admission money at the gates.
Credits: Google Translate