bot·tle (b ŏt l)
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n. 1. A receptacle having a narrow neck, usually no handles, and a mouth that can be plugged, corked, or capped. 2. The quantity that a bottle holds. 3. A receptacle filled with milk or formula that is fed, as to babies, in place of breast milk. 4. Informal a. Intoxicating liquor: Don't take to the bottle. b. The practice of drinking large quantities of intoxicating liquor: Her problem is the bottle. tr.v. bot·tled, bot·tling, bot·tles 1. To place in a bottle. 2. To hold in; restrain: bottled up my emotions.
[Middle English botel, from Old French botele, from Medieval Latin butticula, diminutive of Late Latin buttis, cask, probably from Greek boutis, bouttis, vessel in the shape of the frustum of a cone, of unknown origin.]
bottler n. |