Dictionary Definition
briefcase n : a case with a handle; for carrying
papers or files or books
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
(US) IPA: /ˈbriːfˌkeɪs/Synonyms
Translations
case used for carrying documents
- Czech: kufřík
- Finnish: salkku, asiakirjasalkku
- German: Aktentasche
- Icelandic: skjalataska
Extensive Definition
A briefcase is a narrow box-shaped bag or case used mainly for carrying
papers and other documents and equipped with a handle. Lawyers commonly use
briefcases to carry briefs to
present to a court, hence the name. Businesspeople
and other professionals also use briefcases to carry important
papers and, today, laptop computers.
Briefcases are descendants of the limp satchel
used in the fourteenth century for carrying money and valuables. It
was called a "budget", derived from the Latin word "bulga" or Irish
word "bolg", both meaning leather bag, and also the source of the
financial term "budget".
Godillot of Paris was the first to use a hinged
iron frame on a carpetbag, in 1826. There then
followed the Gladstone bag and the Rosebery, an oval-top bag.
Eventually these became the modern metal-framed briefcase.
Types of briefcases
- A portfolio is a handleless case for carrying in the hand or under the arm. The name is an anglicization of the Italian portafoglio, derived from portare (to carry) and foglio (a sheet of paper).
- A folio case is a portfolio with a retractable handle
- An attaché case is a box-style case made of leather (occasionally aluminium), stretched over a hinged frame that opens into two compartments. It was traditionally carried by an attaché, a diplomatic officer attached to an embassy or consulate officially assigned to serve in a particular capacity (e.g., cultural attaché; military attaché).