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bar·rel  (b  r   l) KEY NOUN:
- A large cylindrical container, usually made of staves bound together with hoops, with a flat top and bottom of equal diameter.
- The quantity that a barrel with a given or standard capacity will hold.
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Abbr. bar. or bbl. or bl. Any of various units of volume or capacity. In the U.S. Customary System it varies, as a liquid measure, from 31 to 42 gallons (120 to 159 liters) as established by law or usage. See Table at measurement.
- The cylindrical part or hollow shaft of any of various mechanisms, as:
- The metal, cylindrical part of a firearm through which the bullet travels.
- A cylinder that contains a movable piston.
- The drum of a capstan.
- The cylinder within the mechanism of a timepiece that contains the mainspring.
- The trunk of a quadruped animal, such as a horse or cow.
- Informal A large quantity: a barrel of fun.
- Slang An act or instance of moving rapidly, often recklessly, in a motor vehicle.
ADJECTIVE: - Likened to a barrel, as in shape: a barrel chest; barrel hips.
VERB: bar·reled or bar·relled, bar·rel·ing or bar·rel·ling, bar·rels VERB: tr.- To put or pack in a barrel.
VERB: intr. Slang - To move at a high speed or rate of progress: "That the European Union barreled ahead was not surprising" (Richard W. Stevenson).
IDIOMS: on the barrel/barrelhead- Granting, giving, or requesting no credit: paid cash on the barrel for the car.
over a barrel- In a very awkward position from which extrication is difficult: During the negotiations the opposing faction had us over a barrel.
ETYMOLOGY:Middle English barel, from Old French baril
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