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View synonyms for vessel

vessel

[ ves-uhl ]

noun

  1. a craft for traveling on water, now usually one larger than an ordinary rowboat; a ship or boat.
  2. an airship.
  3. a hollow or concave utensil, as a cup, bowl, pitcher, or vase, used for holding liquids or other contents.
  4. Anatomy, Zoology. a tube or duct, as an artery or vein, containing or conveying blood or some other body fluid.
  5. Botany. a duct formed in the xylem, composed of connected cells that have lost their intervening partitions, that conducts water and mineral nutrients. Compare tracheid.
  6. a person regarded as a holder or receiver of something, especially something nonmaterial:

    a vessel of grace;

    a vessel of wrath.



vessel

/ ˈvɛsəl /

noun

  1. any object used as a container, esp for a liquid
  2. a passenger or freight-carrying ship, boat, etc
  3. an aircraft, esp an airship
  4. anatomy a tubular structure that transports such body fluids as blood and lymph
  5. botany a tubular element of xylem tissue consisting of a row of cells in which the connecting cell walls have broken down
  6. rare.
    a person regarded as an agent or vehicle for some purpose or quality

    she was the vessel of the Lord

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

vessel

/ vĕsəl /

  1. A blood vessel.
  2. A long, continuous column made of the lignified walls of dead vessel elements, along which water flows in the xylem of angiosperms.
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Other Words From

  • vesseled especially British, vesselled adjective
  • un·vesseled adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of vessel1

First recorded in 1250–1300; Middle English, from Anglo-French, Old French va(i)ssel, vessel, from Latin vāscellum, from vās “vessel” ( vase ) + -cellum, diminutive suffix
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Word History and Origins

Origin of vessel1

C13: from Old French vaissel, from Late Latin vascellum urn, from Latin vās vessel
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Example Sentences

The DOE's Office of Science has funded separate research about some of the technologies needed to inject the spin-polarized fuel into the fusion vessel.

Blood vessels stop in the skin layer located below the epidermis.

It's quite conceivable that cells in the brain, blood vessels or other organs also remember obesity and contribute to the effect.

“I’ve been a vessel for a lot of different things, and I am much more interested in developing my own stories,” she says.

And it was the ferry operator's first vessel built outside of Scotland.

From BBC

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Vespuccivessel element