woolpackEtymologyFrom Middle English wolpak, wullepak, equivalent to wool + pack.woolpack means A bag of wool, traditionally weighing 240 pounds. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 88 out of 100.nounA bag of wool, traditionally weighing 240 pounds.“There was a Fellow with a Wen in his Neck, larger than five Woolpacks, and another with a couple of wooden Legs, each about twenty foot high.”A cirrocumulus cloud.“During the following hour, the high white fleecy clouds lowered and congested and grayed into woolpack.”A charge resembling a pillow or cushion.