bottle
bot·tle / ˈbätl/ • n. a container, typically made of glass or plastic and with a narrow neck, used for storing drinks or other liquids: a bottle of soda pop. ∎ the contents of such a container: he managed to put away a bottle of wine. ∎ (the bottle) inf. used in reference to heavy drinking: more women are taking to the bottle. ∎ a bottle fitted with a nipple for giving milk or other drinks to babies and very young children: a bottle of formula. ∎ (the bottle) the milk given to a baby from such a bottle: the age at which parents want a baby to give up the bottle varies. ∎ a large metal cylinder holding liquefied gas.• v. [tr.] (usu. be bottled) place (drinks or other liquid) in bottles or jars: the wine is then bottled. ∎ [usu. as adj.] (bottled) store (gas) in a container in liquefied form: connecting the bottled gas to the stove.PHRASES: hit the bottle inf. drink heavily.PHRASAL VERBS: bottle something up repress or conceal feelings over a period of time: learning how to express anger instead of bottling it up. DERIVATIVES: bot·tler n.
bottle
bottle The traditional wine bottle holds 700, 720, or 750 mL of wine, depending on the variety; within the EU wine bottles are standardized at 700 mL.
A two‐bottle size is a magnum, four is a Jeroboam or double magnum, six a Methuselah, twelve a Salmanzar, and twenty a Nebuchadnezzar.
bottle
bottle XIV. — OF. botele, botaille (mod. bouteille) :- medL. butticula, dim. of late L. buttis BUTT4.