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barrel
[bar-uhl]
noun
a cylindrical wooden container with slightly bulging sides made of staves hooped together, and with flat, parallel ends.
the quantity that such a vessel of some standard size can hold: for most liquids, 31½ U.S. gallons (119 L); for petroleum, 42 U.S. gallons (159 L); for dry materials, 105 U.S. dry quarts (115 L). bbl
any large quantity.
a barrel of fun.
any container, case, or part similar to a wooden barrel in form.
Ordnance., the tube of a gun.
Machinery., the chamber of a pump in which the piston works.
a drum turning on a shaft, as in a weight-driven clock.
Horology., the cylindrical case in a watch or clock within which the mainspring is coiled.
Ornithology Obsolete., a calamus or quill.
the trunk of a quadruped, especially of a horse, cow, etc.
Nautical., the main portion of a capstan, about which the rope winds, between the drumhead at the top and the pawl rim at the bottom.
a rotating horizontal cylinder in which manufactured objects are coated or polished by tumbling in a suitable substance.
any structure having the form of a barrel vault.
Also called throat. Automotive., a passageway in a carburetor that has the shape of a Venturi tube.
verb (used with object)
to put or pack in a barrel or barrels.
to finish (metal parts) by tumbling in a barrel.
Informal., to force to go or proceed at high speed.
He barreled his car through the dense traffic.
verb (used without object)
Informal., to travel or drive very fast.
to barrel along the highway.
barrel
/ ˈbærəl /
noun
a cylindrical container usually bulging outwards in the middle and held together by metal hoops; cask
Also called: barrelful. the amount that a barrel can hold
a unit of capacity used in brewing, equal to 36 Imperial gallons
a unit of capacity used in the oil and other industries, normally equal to 42 US gallons or 35 Imperial gallons
a thing or part shaped like a barrel, esp a tubular part of a machine
the tube through which the projectile of a firearm is discharged
horology the cylindrical drum in a watch or clock that is rotated by the mainspring
the trunk of a four-legged animal
the barrel of a horse
the quill of a feather
informal, a large measure; a great deal (esp in the phrases barrel of fun, barrel of laughs )
informal, the hollow inner side of a wave
informal, powerless
informal, to be forced to use one's last and weakest resource
verb
(tr) to put into a barrel or barrels
informal, (intr; foll by along, in, etc) (intr) to travel or move very fast
informal, to ride on the inside of a wave
Other Word Forms
- half-barrel noun
- unbarreled adjective
- unbarrelled adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of barrel1
Idioms and Phrases
over a barrel, in a helpless, weak, or awkward position; unable to act.
They really had us over a barrel when they foreclosed the mortgage.
Example Sentences
The rise in production will be complemented by a slight rise in average Brent crude prices, which ticked up to $69.13 a barrel from $67.88 in the prior quarter.
The group of oil producing countries had already started to unwind a layer of production cuts totaling roughly 1.65 million barrels a day that was first implemented in 2023.
During apple season, neighbors drop barrels of seedling apples on the lawn for Kaiser’s experiments.
Commercial crude oil stocks excluding the Strategic Petroleum Reserve rose by 3.7 million barrels to 420.3 million barrels in the week ended Oct.
For one glorious afternoon, oil traders were essentially reverse-panhandling: “Please, sir, take this barrel of West Texas Intermediate. Here’s forty bucks. I insist.”
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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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