to attract very large audiences
to end a sexual or romantic relationship with someone
to fill a period of time with a lot of activities
to fill something with a lot of people or things
to stop doing something, especially a job
used for telling someone to stop doing something that is annoying you
A year ago, she packed in her job to join the band.
He filled the coffin with logs as efficiently as whoever filled Blake's pack in Benares with bricks.
He packed in an amazing amount in such a short life.
I’m thinking of packing him in.
She paused to light another cigarette from a second pack in her pocket, not a cigarillo this time but menthol.
The more people they can pack in, the more money they make.
The play was still packing them in after several weeks.
she asks, and I see she's shifted her stare to the pack in my hand.
packs in
packing in
packed in
There is no origin for this phrasal verb
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