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View synonyms for kettle

kettle

[ ket-l ]

noun

  1. a metal container in which to boil liquids, cook foods, etc.; pot.
  2. Geology. kettle hole.
  3. an enclosed area to which demonstrators are herded for containment by police:

    Journalists were the first to be allowed to leave the kettle.



verb (used with object)

  1. to surround and contain (demonstrators) in an enclosed area:

    Most demonstrators were too distracted to notice they were being kettled.

kettle

/ ˈkɛtəl /

noun

  1. a metal or plastic container with a handle and spout for boiling water
  2. any of various metal containers for heating liquids, cooking fish, etc
  3. a large metal vessel designed to withstand high temperatures, used in various industrial processes such as refining and brewing
  4. informal.
    NEW.FOR.DICT.COM an enclosed space formed by a police cordon in order to contain people involved in a public demonstration
  5. short for kettle hole


verb

  1. informal.
    NEW.FOR.DICT.COM tr (of a police force) to contain (people involved in a public demonstration) in an enclosed space

kettle

/ kĕtl /

  1. A steep, bowl-shaped hollow in ground once covered by a glacier. Kettles are believed to form when a block of ice left by a glacier becomes covered by sediments and later melts, leaving a hollow. They are usually tens of meters deep and up to tens of kilometers in diameter and often contain surface water.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of kettle1

First recorded before 900; Middle English ketel, from Old Norse ketill, ultimately derived from Latin catillus, diminutive of catīnus “pot”; replacing Old English cetel, cietel, ultimately from Latin as above; compare German Kessel

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Word History and Origins

Origin of kettle1

C13: from Old Norse ketill; related to Old English cietel kettle, Old High German kezzil; all ultimately from Latin catillus a little pot, from catīnus pot

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Idioms and Phrases

In addition to the idiom beginning with kettle , also see pot calling the kettle black .

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Example Sentences

The kettle was adamantly calling the pot black as Netanyahu accused Iran of doing all sorts of shady things with nuclear power.

The Nazi-hunting era that began with the thunder of a kettle drum at the Nuremberg trials in 1945 ended with a whimper in 2011.

Electric kettle  Like many Americans who have spent time living in the UK, while I was there I fell in love with electric kettles.

I could hear Eliza downstairs, filling up another kettle for tea.

She got an electric kettle and plugged it in, transferring a teapot of hot water into the tub.

Roulard had played the trumpet in the regimental band in which Aristide had played the kettle drum.

One evening at tea, a copper kettle, with hot water, stood on the hob.

Mother would want some tea by and by, if she worked late into the evening, and Jess drew the kettle forward.

Jess made a cushion for it out of grass and laid it on top of the kettle full of treasures.

The big kettle, empty and clean, was hung over the low fire and butter was dropped in.

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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.

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