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‘Rollerboard’ Or ‘Rollaboard’: What’s The Correct Term For A Suitcase?

From trademarks to eggcorns, there have been many steps along the journey of our different terms for a rolling suitcase.

I like to fancy myself a seasoned traveler, so imagine my surprise when I learned I might be using the wrong term for a common type of luggage.

Growing up, my parents always said “rollerboard” in reference to wheeled suitcase, and I followed suit. But on a recent text thread, I noticed a friend wrote “rollaboard,” prompting me to question everything I’ve ever believed.

But fortunately, I’m not the only one who is confused. A very non-scientific online poll from 2010 found that 53% of respondents say “rollaboard,” 32% go with “rollerboard” and 15% “have no idea.”

Still, officially speaking, which is it? Rollaboard? Rollerboard? Roll-aboard? Roll Aboard? Something else entirely? I turned to some experts ― and the vast archives of the internet ― to find out.

“‘Roll aboard’ was the original term,” linguist and lexicographer Ben Zimmer told HuffPost. “‘Rollaboard’ was trademarked by Robert Plath for his company Travelpro in 1991, though luggage appeared under the brand name “Roll-Aboard” as early as 1985.”

Indeed, a 1985 advertisement in the New Jersey newspaper the Daily Record presents a collection of bags with the descriptor “U.S. Luggage Roll-Aboard Group,” available at M. Epstein’s department store in Morristown.

“[The ad] claims a trademark, but does not look like luggage on wheels,” said etymologist Barry Popik, who also shared the ad with HuffPost, along with many other clippings.

Poh Kim Yeoh / EyeEm via Getty Images

From trademarks to eggcorns, there have been many steps along the journey of our different terms for a rolling suitcase.

In the early 1990s, Travelpro’s “rollabord” suitcase appeared in several newspapers. References to nonspecific “roll-aboard” luggage cropped up in 1994, and from 1993 onward, there were ads for “rollerboard” suitcases as well. A 1999 clipping from a Canadian newspaper included a reference to “roller board suitcases.”

“‘Rollerboard’ began appearing as a more generic term in the 1990s,” Zimmer explained. “It may have started out as a misinterpretation of ‘roll-aboard,’ but it also avoided the trademarked term, as this 2003 USA Today article suggests.”

Even more recently, Jonathan Franzen used the word “rollerboard” in his 2018 book of essays “The End of the End of the Earth” ― much to the dismay of pilot and blogger Patrick Smith. Author Gary Shteyngart also went with that version of the term in his novel “Lake Success,”…

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