bottles (Meaning)

bottles

to shut up as if in a bottle, a rigid or semirigid container typically of glass or plastic having a comparatively narrow neck or mouth and usually no handle see wash bottle, liquid food (such as milk) used in place of mother's milk, the quantity held by a bottle, to confine as if in a bottle, a bag made of skin used to hold a liquid, a rigid or semirigid container typically of glass or plastic having a comparatively narrow neck or mouth and usually no handle, to put into a bottle, intoxicating drink, to put or keep in a position or situation that makes free activity, progress, or escape difficult or impossible, to put into or as if into a bottle, a usually bottle-shaped container made of skin for storing a liquid, a container (as of glass or plastic) with a narrow neck and mouth and usually no handle, a bottle with a rubber or plastic nipple for feeding an infant, mettle, courage, liquid food usually consisting of milk and supplements that is fed from a bottle (as to an infant) in place of mother's milk

bottles Sentence Examples

  1. The shelves in the pantry were lined with countless glass bottles.
  2. The pharmacist meticulously counted the bottles of medication before dispensing them.
  3. The baby cried incessantly for its bottle of milk.
  4. The students filed into the chemistry lab, each carrying their own bottle of chemicals.
  5. The hiker filled his water bottles before embarking on the long trail.
  6. The artist displayed her collection of vintage bottles in a quaint gallery.
  7. The ship's cargo consisted of hundreds of bottles of wine.
  8. The children gathered colorful bottles and constructed an elaborate fairy house.
  9. The laboratory conducted experiments using tiny bottles of radioactive isotopes.
  10. The old man reminisced about the days when his father used to make homemade beer in small bottles.

FAQs About the word bottles

to shut up as if in a bottle, a rigid or semirigid container typically of glass or plastic having a comparatively narrow neck or mouth and usually no handle s

wines, alcohols,drinks, boozes, spirits, liquors, brandies, rums, juices, hooches

nonintoxicants,,

The shelves in the pantry were lined with countless glass bottles.

The pharmacist meticulously counted the bottles of medication before dispensing them.

The baby cried incessantly for its bottle of milk.

The students filed into the chemistry lab, each carrying their own bottle of chemicals.