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pot
1[ pot ]
noun
- a container of earthenware, metal, etc., usually round and deep and having a handle or handles and often a lid, used for cooking, serving, and other purposes.
- such a container with its contents:
a pot of stew.
- the amount contained in or held by a pot; potful.
- a flowerpot.
- a container of liquor or other drink:
a pot of ale.
- liquor or other drink.
- a cagelike vessel for trapping fish, lobsters, eels, etc., typically made of wood, wicker, or wire. Compare lobster pot.
- a chamber pot.
- Metallurgy.
- a vessel for melting metal; melting pot.
- an electrolytic cell for reducing certain metals, as aluminum, from fused salts.
- British.
- a chimney pot.
- Dialect. a basket or box used for carrying provisions or the like; a pannier.
- Slang. a large sum of money.
- all the money bet at a single time; pool.
- British Slang. (in horse racing) the favorite.
- a potshot.
- a liquid measure, usually equal to a pint or quart.
- Armor.
- an open, broad-brimmed helmet of the 17th century.
- any open helmet.
- Slang. a potbelly.
verb (used with object)
- to put into a pot.
- to preserve (food) in a pot.
- to cook in a pot.
- to transplant into a pot:
We must pot the petunias.
- Hunting.
- to shoot (game birds) on the ground or water, or (game animals) at rest, instead of in flight or running:
He can't even pot a sitting duck.
- to shoot for food, not for sport.
- Informal. to capture, secure, or win.
pot
2[ pot ]
noun
pot
3[ pot ]
noun
- a deep hole; pit.
pot.
4abbreviation for
- potential.
- potentiometer.
pot
1/ pɒt /
noun
- a deep hole or pothole
- ( capital when part of a name )
Pen-y-Ghent Pot
pot
2/ pɒt /
noun
- a container made of earthenware, glass, or similar material; usually round and deep, often having a handle and lid, used for cooking and other domestic purposes
- the amount that a pot will hold; potful
- a chamber pot, esp a small one designed for a baby or toddler
- a handmade piece of pottery
- a large mug or tankard, as for beer
- any of various measures used for serving beer
- informal.a cup or trophy, esp of silver, awarded as a prize in a competition
- the money or stakes in the pool in gambling games, esp poker
- informal.often plural a large amount, esp of money
- a wicker trap for catching fish, esp crustaceans
a lobster pot
- billiards snooker a shot by which a ball is pocketed
- short for chimneypot
- informal.a joint fund created by a group of individuals or enterprises and drawn upon by them for specified purposes
- hunting See pot shot
- See potbelly
- go to potto go to ruin; deteriorate
verb
- to set (a plant) in a flowerpot to grow
- to put or preserve (goods, meat, etc) in a pot
- to cook (food) in a pot
- to shoot (game) for food rather than for sport
- to shoot (game birds or animals) while they are on the ground or immobile rather than flying or running
- also intr to shoot casually or without careful aim at (an animal, etc)
- to sit (a baby or toddler) on a chamber pot
- also intr to shape clay as a potter
- billiards snooker to pocket (a ball)
- informal.to capture or win; secure
pot
3/ pɒt /
noun
- informal.short for potentiometer
pot
4/ pɒt /
noun
- slang.cannabis used as a drug in any form, such as leaves (marijuana or hemp) or resin (hashish)
Other Words From
- potlike adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of pot1
Origin of pot2
Word History and Origins
Origin of pot1
Origin of pot2
Origin of pot3
Idioms and Phrases
- go to pot, to become ruined; deteriorate:
With no one to care for it, the lovely old garden went to pot.
- stir the pot, to promote instability or conflict, as by taunting, encouraging, or otherwise provoking the participants in an ongoing disagreement:
Trolls on Twitter just want to stir the pot.
- sweeten the pot, Informal. sweeten ( def 8 ).
More idioms and phrases containing pot
In addition to the idiom beginning with pot , also see fish or cut bait (shit or get off the pot) ; go to pot ; hit the jackpot ; sweeten the kitty (pot) ; take potluck ; tempest in a teapot ; watched pot never boils .Advertisement
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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