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.
Shares of Chipotle Mexican Grill are down around 33% over the past 12 months, after consumers got bored of the fast-casual industry’s high-priced “slop bowls” last year.
From MarketWatch
One sample: “Chuck Norris can dribble a bowling ball.”
For Lloyd’s school haircut Aunt Maud had used the same bowl she used on me.
From Literature
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Two men came over from the main fire, carrying four steaming birchwood bowls.
From Literature
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As she says, a noble use for the dregs of the nut bowl.
From Salon
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.