'Baskets' in the Bible
When the head chef heard that the interpretation was good, he told Joseph, "I was also in my dream. All of a sudden, there were three baskets with white bread stacked on top of my head.
Joseph replied, "This is what your dream means: The three baskets are also three days.
Now the king's sons, totaling 70 men, were living with the leading men of the city, who were their guardians. When the letter from Jehu arrived, the city leaders arrested the king's sons, slaughtered all 70 of them, put their heads in baskets, and sent them to Jehu at Jezreel.
After Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, had taken Jehoiakim's son Jeconiah, king of Judah, along with the officials of Judah, the craftsmen, and the smiths from Jerusalem into exile, and had brought them to Babylon, the LORD showed me two baskets of figs placed right in front of the Temple of the LORD.
All of them ate and were filled. Then the disciples picked up what was left of the broken pieces, twelve baskets full.
All of them ate until they were filled, then the disciples picked up what was left of the broken pieces seven baskets full.
Don't you understand yet? Don't you remember the five loaves for the 5,000 and how many baskets you collected,
or the seven loaves for the 4,000 and how many baskets you collected?
Then the disciples picked up twelve baskets full of leftover bread and fish.
The people ate and were filled. Then the disciples picked up the leftover pieces seven large baskets full.
When I broke the five loaves for the 5,000, how many baskets did you fill with leftover pieces?" They told him, "Twelve."
"When I broke the seven loaves for the 4,000, how many large baskets did you fill with the leftover pieces?" They told him, "Seven."
All of them ate and were filled. When they collected the leftover pieces, there were twelve baskets.
So they collected and filled twelve baskets full of pieces of the five barley loaves left over by those who had eaten.