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bucket
[buhk-it]
noun
a deep, cylindrical vessel, usually of metal, plastic, or wood, with a flat bottom and a semicircular bail, for collecting, carrying, or holding water, sand, fruit, etc.; pail.
anything resembling or suggesting this.
Machinery.
any of the scoops attached to or forming the endless chain in certain types of conveyors or elevators.
the scoop or clamshell of a steam shovel, power shovel, or dredge.
a vane or blade of a waterwheel, paddle wheel, water turbine, or the like.
(in a dam) a concave surface at the foot of a spillway for deflecting the downward flow of water.
a bucketful.
a bucket of sand.
Basketball.
Informal., field goal.
the part of the keyhole extending from the foul line to the end line.
Bowling., a leave of the two, four, five, and eight pins, or the three, five, six, and nine pins.
verb (used with object)
to lift, carry, or handle in a bucket (often followed by up orout ).
Chiefly British., to ride (a horse) fast and without concern for tiring it.
to handle (orders, transactions, etc.) in or as if in a bucket shop.
verb (used without object)
Informal., to move or drive fast; hurry.
bucket
/ ˈbʌkɪt /
noun
an open-topped roughly cylindrical container; pail
Also called: bucketful. the amount a bucket will hold
any of various bucket-like parts of a machine, such as the scoop on a mechanical shovel
a cupped blade or bucket-like compartment on the outer circumference of a water wheel, paddle wheel, etc
computing a unit of storage on a direct-access device from which data can be retrieved
a turbine rotor blade
an ice cream container
slang, to die
verb
(tr) to carry in or put into a bucket
(of rain) to fall very heavily
it bucketed all day
to travel or drive fast
(tr) to ride (a horse) hard without consideration
slang, (tr) to criticize severely
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of bucket1
Idioms and Phrases
kick the bucket, to die.
His children were greedily waiting for him to kick the bucket.
drop in the bucket, a small, usually inadequate amount in relation to what is needed or requested.
The grant for research was just a drop in the bucket.
drop the bucket on, to implicate, incriminate, or expose.
Example Sentences
During L.A.’s recent heat wave, when temperatures regularly surpassed 90 degrees, a woman selling rose bouquets out of buckets at Pershing Square looked beleaguered while standing in the paltry shade of a tree.
As the camera zoomed in, Anastacia strutted down the staircase, her hair in pigtails under a candy striped bucket hat, her midriff exposed by a crop top, in accordance with 1990s pop regulations.
The startling beauty of the archipelago has regularly earned it "world's best beach" titles, and thrust it onto the bucket lists of the globe's most affluent travellers.
With the bucket hats, there's been a real interest, people have stopped to chat and the locals have welcomed us to the city.
Inside, a treasure trove awaited: Exclusive merch hung on the walls, bins with posters lined the floors, and bucket hats were stacked on shelves.
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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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