bowl
1 Americannoun
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a rather deep, round dish or basin, used chiefly for holding liquids, food, etc.
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the contents of a bowl.
a bowl of tomato soup.
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a rounded, cuplike, hollow part.
the bowl of a pipe.
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a large drinking cup.
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festive drinking; conviviality.
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any bowl-shaped depression or formation.
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an edifice with tiers of seats forming sides like those of a bowl, having the arena at the bottom; stadium.
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Also called bowl game. a football game played after the regular season by teams selected by the sponsors of the game, usually as representing the best from a region of the country.
the Rose Bowl.
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Typography. a curved or semicircular line of a character, as of a, d, b, etc.
verb (used with object)
noun
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one of the balls, having little or no bias, used in playing ninepins or tenpins.
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one of the biased or weighted balls used in lawn bowling.
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(used with a singular verb) bowls, lawn bowling.
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a delivery of the ball in bowling or lawn bowling.
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(formerly) a rotating cylindrical part in a machine, as one to reduce friction.
verb (used without object)
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to play at bowling or bowls; participate in or have a game or games of bowling.
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to roll a bowl or ball.
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to move along smoothly and rapidly.
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Cricket. to deliver the ball to be played by the batsman.
verb (used with object)
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to roll or trundle, as a ball or hoop.
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to attain by bowling.
He bowls a good game.
She usually bowls a 120 game, but today she bowled 180.
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to knock or strike, as by the ball in bowling (usually followed by over ordown ).
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to carry or convey, as in a wheeled vehicle.
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Cricket. to eliminate (a batsman) by bowling (usually followed byout ).
He was bowled for a duck.
He was bowled out for a duck.
verb phrase
noun
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a round container open at the top, used for holding liquid, keeping fruit, serving food, etc
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Also: bowlful. the amount a bowl will hold
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the rounded or hollow part of an object, esp of a spoon or tobacco pipe
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any container shaped like a bowl, such as a sink or lavatory
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a bowl-shaped building or other structure, such as a football stadium or amphitheatre
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a bowl-shaped depression of the land surface See also dust bowl
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literary
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a drinking cup
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intoxicating drink
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noun
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a wooden ball used in the game of bowls, having flattened sides, one side usually being flatter than the other in order to make it run on a curved course
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a large heavy ball with holes for gripping with the fingers and thumb, used in tenpin bowling
verb
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to roll smoothly or cause to roll smoothly, esp by throwing underarm along the ground
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to move easily and rapidly, as in a car
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cricket
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to send (a ball) down the pitch from one's hand towards the batsman, keeping the arm straight while doing so
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Also: bowl out. to dismiss (a batsman) by delivering a ball that breaks his wicket
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(intr) to play bowls or tenpin bowling
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(tr) (in tenpin bowling) to score (a specified amount)
he bowled 120
Other Word Forms
- bowllike adjective
Etymology
Origin of bowl1
First recorded before 950; Middle English bolle, Old English bolla; cognate with Old Norse bolli; boll
Origin of bowl2
First recorded in 1375–1425; late Middle English boule, bule, bowle, from Middle French, from Latin bulla “bubble, knob”; boil 1, bola
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
Given how the Test ended, it is easy to forget just how well England bowled to dismiss Australia for 132 in the first innings in Perth.
From BBC
England bowled twice on the second day after being dismissed in 34.4 overs in their second innings.
From BBC
In the early 1990s, a golden age of fast bowling, Spencer might have been the quickest of all.
From BBC
It led Latham to predict that "it will be no different" to previous Tests at the venue where the team that wins the toss elects to bowl first.
From Barron's
It has been a rough stretch for the makers of healthy—but fast—lunch bowls.
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.