Bundle v. t. (past & past part. bundled; pres. part. bundling)
1.
To tie or bind in a bundle or roll.
2.
To send off abruptly or without ceremony. "They unmercifully bundled me and my gallant second into our own hackney coach."
3.
To sell together as a single item at one inclusive price; usually done for related products which work or are used together.
To bundle off, to send off in a hurry, or without ceremony; as, the working mothers bundle their children off to school and then try to get themselves to work on time.
To bundle one's self up, to wrap one's self up warmly or cumbrously.
... next night, and in the morning they told him they would give him another room. When it was a certain hour, the husband and wife went to the forest to cut a bundle of fagots. Then the magician went home; and the cobbler, who had made ready a sickle, said: "Wait until I help you to take the bundle off your back." Then he gave the magician a blow with the sickle and cut off his head. He did the same thing when the magician's wife returned. Then he unfurled his flag, and sounded his trumpet, and the band went out to meet him. After he had arrived ... — Italian Popular Tales • Thomas Frederick Crane