''Luggage'' - 1596, from lug (v.) "to drag;" so, lit. "what has to be lugged about" (or, in Johnson's definition, "any thing of more bulk than [[value]]"). In 20c., the usual [[word]] for "baggage belonging to passengers." | ''Luggage'' - 1596, from lug (v.) "to drag;" so, lit. "what has to be lugged about" (or, in Johnson's definition, "any thing of more bulk than [[value]]"). In 20c., the usual [[word]] for "baggage belonging to passengers." |