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Quiz about Get Your Bags
Quiz about Get Your Bags

Get Your Bags Trivia Quiz


Have you ever noticed how many English words end with "-bag"? Match 10 bag words to their definitions and learn about their origins.

A matching quiz by wellenbrecher. Estimated time: 3 mins.
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Time
3 mins
Type
Match Quiz
Quiz #
423,010
Updated
Feb 17 26
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Very Easy
Avg Score
10 / 10
Plays
137
Last 3 plays: Guest 73 (10/10), Guest 174 (9/10), CeeDeeJay (10/10).
(a) Drag-and-drop from the right to the left, or (b) click on a right side answer box and then on a left side box to move it.
QuestionsChoices
1. A tiny magic pouch full of leaves that dances in hot water to brew your yummy drink  
  teabag
2. A super-fast fluffy pillow in cars that keeps you safe during bumpy crashes  
  schoolbag
3. A wobbly, giggly, squishy chair that flops for comfy sits  
  sandbag
4. A fancy, shiny purse ladies hold tight for sparkly treasures like coins and keys  
  mailbag
5. A trusty backpack for all your school essentials, such as lunches and pencils  
  airbag
6. A heavy sack to fight floods or build epic beach forts  
  windbag
7. A giant postman's treasure chest bursting with letters and secret packages  
  grab bag
8. A chatty whirlwind person who talks and talks like a never-ending gusty gale  
  beanbag
9. A handy container for taking home yummy leftovers from restaurants  
  doggy bag
10. A mystery loot pouch crammed with toys and sweets  
  clutchbag





Select each answer

1. A tiny magic pouch full of leaves that dances in hot water to brew your yummy drink
2. A super-fast fluffy pillow in cars that keeps you safe during bumpy crashes
3. A wobbly, giggly, squishy chair that flops for comfy sits
4. A fancy, shiny purse ladies hold tight for sparkly treasures like coins and keys
5. A trusty backpack for all your school essentials, such as lunches and pencils
6. A heavy sack to fight floods or build epic beach forts
7. A giant postman's treasure chest bursting with letters and secret packages
8. A chatty whirlwind person who talks and talks like a never-ending gusty gale
9. A handy container for taking home yummy leftovers from restaurants
10. A mystery loot pouch crammed with toys and sweets

Most Recent Scores
Today : Guest 73: 10/10
Today : Guest 174: 9/10
Today : CeeDeeJay: 10/10
Today : Guest 174: 10/10
Today : invinoveritas: 10/10
Today : GBfan: 10/10
Today : Guest 136: 8/10
Today : Isipingo: 10/10
Today : asgirl: 10/10

Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. A tiny magic pouch full of leaves that dances in hot water to brew your yummy drink

Answer: teabag

Teabags were invented in 1908 by a clever New Yorker named Thomas Sullivan. He sent tea samples to his customers in small silk pouches. They loved them because there were no more messy loose leaves floating in their cups!

Before then, people had been brewing tea in China for over 2,000 years by simply throwing leaves into boiling water and fishing them out with spoons or strainers. Today, billions of teabags are used every year, and some even have fun shapes like hearts or stars.
2. A super-fast fluffy pillow in cars that keeps you safe during bumpy crashes

Answer: airbag

Airbags popped into cars first in the 1970s, but the real inventor was a German engineer named Walter Linderer who dreamed it up back in 1951 - his idea was like a balloon that explodes with air to save lives!

Before that, seatbelts were the main heroes since the late 1800s, but airbags add an extra puff of protection. Today, they inflate in just 0.03 seconds, faster than you can blink, and cars have them everywhere: steering wheel, sides and even curtains!
3. A wobbly, giggly, squishy chair that flops for comfy sits

Answer: beanbag

Beanbag chairs burst onto the scene in 1969 when Italian designers Gatti, Paolini and Teodori created the first one filled with Styrofoam beads - it was a hit at design fairs because it flops anywhere and hugs your body perfectly.

Before that, people lounged on regular cushions or pillows since ancient times, but nothing wiggled quite like this. Today, they're perfect for building epic sleepover dens, and giant versions can even fill a whole room!
4. A fancy, shiny purse ladies hold tight for sparkly treasures like coins and keys

Answer: clutchbag

Clutchbags sparkled into fashion in the 1920s when flappers - those fun, dancing ladies of the Jazz Age - needed small, sleek purses without straps to clutch while twirling on dance floors.

Before that, handbags had long handles or chains since the 1800s for carrying fans and hankies. Designers like Art Deco artists made them super glamorous with beads and mirrors. Today, celebrities clutch them at red carpets, and kids' versions come in fun colours for pretend parties.
5. A trusty backpack for all your school essentials, such as lunches and pencils

Answer: schoolbag

Schoolbags swung into action in the 1960s as colourful backpacks for kids trekking to school, but early versions were simple satchels from the 1700s that students slung over shoulders for heavy books.

Long ago, ancient Roman and Greek children carried wax tablets in leather pouches. Modern ones zip up fast, have cool pockets for water bottles and some even glow in the dark for safe walks home. Kids everywhere stuff them for the daily journey to school.
6. A heavy sack to fight floods or build epic beach forts

Answer: sandbag

Sandbags turned into flood-fighting heroes during big disasters in the late 1800s and early 1900s like the massive Paris flood of 1910 when over a million sandbags were stacked into walls to battle the rising Seine River. Soldiers, firefighters and ordinary citizens raced to build them overnight.

Thousands of years earlier, ancient Chinese and Egyptian armies filled sacks with earth for strong walls and battles. Kids today toss mini versions at playground games or sandcastle wars.
7. A giant postman's treasure chest bursting with letters and secret packages

Answer: mailbag

Mailbags have been swinging from shoulders since the 1700s when horseback riders and stagecoaches delivered the day's news across bumpy roads in leather pouches tough enough for rain and rough rides.

In the 1800s, train conductors slung giant canvas versions stuffed with thousands of letters connecting faraway families. Pony Express riders in America raced with lightweight ones in 1860-61, covering 1,900 miles in just 10 days. Today, postal workers zip around with modern bags.
8. A chatty whirlwind person who talks and talks like a never-ending gusty gale

Answer: windbag

The word "windbag" puffed up in English around the 1500s-1600s, when people mocked endless talkers as empty sacks filled with nothing but hot air - think Shakespearean plays where characters teased blabbermouths.

By the 1800s, newspapers called politicians windbags during long speeches. Nowadays, children giggle at chatty cartoon characters or relatives who spin yarns that never end, like an unstoppable breeze.
9. A handy container for taking home yummy leftovers from restaurants

Answer: doggy bag

Doggy bags scampered into restaurants in the 1940s during World War II, when people saved every scrap of food - waiters wrapped leftovers in napkins or paper sacks so nothing went to waste, even if it wasn't always for pets.

The name stuck from a funny 1950s ad showing a dog eyeing a steak bone. In the 1960s, fancy foil bags made them chic, and airlines gave them out for plane meals. Now, eco-friendly ones help fight food waste worldwide, turning extras into tomorrow's treasures.
10. A mystery loot pouch crammed with toys and sweets

Answer: grab bag

Grab bags jumped into fun in the 1800s at fairs and shops, where shopkeepers stuffed mystery goodies into paper sacks for lucky buyers - sometimes a prize toy, candy or bargain trinket.

Circus sideshows and holiday bazaars made them a hit by the early 1900s, with kids lining up to plunge hands into the unknown thrill. Today, party goodie bags and piņatas keep the surprise magic alive at birthday parties everywhere.
Source: Author wellenbrecher

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor MotherGoose before going online.
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