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bar
1[ bahr ]
noun
- a relatively long, evenly shaped piece of some solid substance, as metal or wood, used as a guard or obstruction or for some mechanical purpose:
the bars of a cage.
- an oblong piece of any solid material:
a bar of soap;
a candy bar.
- the amount of material in a bar.
- an ingot, lump, or wedge of gold or silver.
- a long ridge of sand, gravel, or other material near or slightly above the surface of the water at or near the mouth of a river or harbor entrance, often constituting an obstruction to navigation.
a bar to important legislation.
- a counter or place where beverages, especially liquors, or light meals are served to customers:
a snack bar;
a milk bar.
Synonyms: cocktail lounge, saloon
- a barroom or tavern.
- (in a home) a counter, small wagon, or similar piece of furniture for serving food or beverages:
a breakfast bar.
- the legal profession.
- the practicing members of the legal profession in a given community.
- any tribunal:
the bar of public opinion.
- a band or strip:
a bar of light.
- a railing in a courtroom separating the general public from the part of the room occupied by the judges, jury, attorneys, etc.
- a crowbar.
- Music.
- Ballet. barre.
- Law.
- an objection that nullifies an action or claim.
- a stoppage or defeat of an alleged right of action.
- Typography. a horizontal stroke of a type character, as of an A, H, t, and sometimes e.
- Architecture. (in tracery) a relatively long and slender upright of stone treated as a colonette or molded.
- Building Trades.
- an iron or steel shape:
I-bar.
- a muntin.
- Military. one of a pair of metal or cloth insignia worn by certain commissioned officers.
- bars, the transverse ridges on the roof of the mouth of a horse.
- a space between the molar and canine teeth of a horse into which the bit is fitted.
- (in a bridle) the mouthpiece connecting the cheeks.
- Heraldry. a horizontal band, narrower than a fess, that crosses the field of an escutcheon.
- Obsolete. a gateway capable of being barred.
verb (used with object)
- to equip or fasten with a bar or bars:
Bar the door before retiring for the night.
- to block by or as if by bars:
The police barred the exits in an attempt to prevent the thief 's escape.
- to prevent or hinder:
They barred her entrance to the club.
- to exclude or except:
He was barred from membership because of his reputation.
Synonyms: drop
- to mark with bars, stripes, or bands.
preposition
- except; omitting; but:
bar none.
bar
2[ bahr ]
noun
bar
3[ bahr ]
noun
- a centimeter-gram-second unit of pressure, equal to one million dynes per square centimeter.
- (formerly) microbar. : b
BAR
4abbreviation for
bar.
5abbreviation for
- barometer.
- barometric.
- barrel.
- barrister.
Bar.
6abbreviation for
- Baruch.
B.Ar.
7abbreviation for
- Bachelor of Architecture.
Bar-
1/ bɑː; bar /
prefix
- (before Jewish patronymic names) son of
Bar-Kochba
BAR
2abbreviation for
- Browning Automatic Rifle
bar.
3abbreviation for
- barometer
- barometric
- barrel (container or unit of measure)
- barrister
Bar
4/ bɑː /
noun
- (in England and elsewhere) barristers collectively
- the legal profession collectively
- be called to the Barto become a barrister
- be called within the Barto be appointed as a Queen's Counsel
bar
5/ bɑː /
noun
- immunity from being caught or otherwise penalized in a game
interjection
- a cry for such immunity
bar
6/ bɑː /
noun
- a cgs unit of pressure equal to 10 6dynes per square centimetre. 1 bar is equivalent to 10 5newtons per square metre
bar
7/ bɑː /
noun
- a rigid usually straight length of metal, wood, etc, that is longer than it is wide or thick, used esp as a barrier or as a structural or mechanical part
a bar of a gate
- a solid usually rectangular block of any material
a bar of soap
- anything that obstructs or prevents
- an offshore ridge of sand, mud, or shingle lying near the shore and parallel to it, across the mouth of a river, bay, or harbour, or linking an island to the mainland
- an alluvial deposit in a stream, river, or lake
- a counter or room where alcoholic drinks are served
- a counter, room, or establishment where a particular range of goods, food, services, etc, are sold
a heel bar
a coffee bar
- a narrow band or stripe, as of colour or light
- a heating element in an electric fire
- (in England) the area in a court of law separating the part reserved for the bench and Queen's Counsel from the area occupied by junior barristers, solicitors, and the general public See also Bar
- the place in a court of law where the accused stands during his trial
the prisoner at the bar
- a particular court of law
- (in the House of Lords and House of Commons) the boundary where nonmembers wishing to address either House appear and where persons are arraigned
- a plea showing that a plaintiff has no cause of action, as when the case has already been adjudicated upon or the time allowed for bringing the action has passed
- anything referred to as an authority or tribunal
the bar of decency
- Also calledmeasure music
- a group of beats that is repeated with a consistent rhythm throughout a piece or passage of music. The number of beats in the bar is indicated by the time signature
- another word for bar line
- insignia added to a decoration indicating a second award
- a strip of metal worn with uniform, esp to signify rank or as an award for service
- a variant spelling of barre
- sport See crossbar
- gymnastics See horizontal bar
- part of the metal mouthpiece of a horse's bridle
- the space between the horse's teeth in which such a part fits
- either of two horny extensions that project forwards and inwards from the rear of the outer layer of a horse's hoof
- See crowbar glazing-bar
- lacemaking needlework another name for bride 2
- heraldry an ordinary consisting of a horizontal line across a shield, typically narrower than a fesse, and usually appearing in twos or threes
- maths a superscript line ⁻ placed over a letter symbol to indicate, for example, a mean value or the complex conjugate of a complex number
- behind barsin prison
- won't have a bar of or wouldn't have a bar of informal.cannot tolerate; dislike
verb
- to fasten or secure with a bar
to bar the door
- to shut in or out with or as if with barriers
to bar the entrances
- to obstruct; hinder
the fallen tree barred the road
- usually foll by from to prohibit; forbid
to bar a couple from meeting
- usually foll by from to keep out; exclude
to bar a person from membership
- to mark with a bar or bars
- law to prevent or halt (an action) by showing that the claimant has no cause
- to mark off (music) into bars with bar lines
preposition
- except for
the best recital bar last night's
- bar nonewithout exception
bar
/ bär /
- A unit used to measure atmospheric pressure. It is equal to a force of 100,000 newtons per square meter of surface area, or 0.987 atmosphere.
- An elongated, offshore ridge of sand, gravel, or other unconsolidated sediment, formed by the action of waves or long-shore currents and submerged at least during high tide. Bars are especially common near the mouths of rivers or estuaries.
- A ridgelike mound of sand, gravel or silt formed within a stream, along its banks, or at its mouth. Bars form where the stream's current slows down, causing sediment to be deposited.
Other Words From
- barless adjective
- barra·ble adjective
- un·barra·ble adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of bar1
Word History and Origins
Origin of bar1
Origin of bar2
Origin of bar3
Idioms and Phrases
- at bar, Law.
- before the court and being tried:
a case at bar.
- before all the judges of a court:
a trial at bar.
- behind bars, in jail:
We wanted the criminal behind bars.
More idioms and phrases containing bar
In addition to the idiom beginning with bar , also see behind bars ; no holds barred .Synonym Study
Example Sentences
I took out my knife, my Ka-Bar, and knocked his teeth out, but they fell into his throat.
You might work on the same groove for five hours nonstop, some three-bar thing over and over.
The bar also claims that it hosted the first-ever poetry slam 28 years ago.
A sepia photo shows him as a young boy, head in his hands, with a large book open at a bar table.
His later books drew heavily from experiences and people he encountered at the bar, including the cruel captain in The Sea-Wolf.
But you will find most colleges and most college societies bar religious instruction and discussion.
Ogden Hoffman, a distinguished member of the New York bar, died, aged 62.
The mosquito bar was drawn over her; the old woman had come in while she slept and let down the bar.
And when three come, me and Maud was on the Bar Y road where it goes acrosst that crick-bottom.
If dat preacher goes to run a bar agin me,” he says, “py golly, I makes no more moneys!
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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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