0 a rectangular leather bag with a long strap, used especially in the past by children for carrying books to school
The child takes a snack in a piece of paper or a satchel and there is nowhere to warm it.
Nothing of value must be left in overcoat and raincoat pockets, or in bags and satchels.
Advertising, rather than the quality of journalism, determines the weight of the satchels carried by newspaper boys and girls to our front doors every day.
Is it appropriate for a child's school satchel to be searched as a matter of routine in cases of this kind?
So at the end of the two parts of the transaction, we have £125,000 in our satchel.
I myself should doubt whether very many parents to-day, or even in days gone by, provided their children with satchels made of real leather.
We all know what happens to those odd little messages that get stuck at the bottom of the satchels of much younger children.
They were to be found tucked furtively into the satchel and concealed craftily under every teenager's desk top.