Englishfor English speakers
bottle
Noun
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A bottle is a container, usually made of glass that holds liquid and has a cap or stopper.
He drank cold water from a plastic bottle.
She brought two bottles of wine to the party.
We collected the empty beer bottles and took them back to the shop.
I filled up the bottle with water.
She cracked open four bottles and poured glasses for each of them.
The floor under the Rock was covered with trash: broken bottles, food wrappers, and ripped clothing.
The bottle had a long, thin neck.
bottle
Verb
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If you bottle your feelings up, you keep them inside and don't let them show.
You can tell he is still angry, but he's keeping it bottled up.
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If you bottle somebody or something up, you keep them in a very small space, often under pressure.
We were bottled up in that plane for 32 hours.
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If you bottle something, you put it in a bottle.
This plant bottles a lot of spring water every day.
Fed
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noun
(= Federal)
any federal law-enforcement officer
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noun
(= Federal Reserve)
the central bank of the United States; incorporates 12 Federal Reserve branch banks and all national banks and state-chartered commercial banks and some trust companies
the Fed seeks to control the United States economy by raising and lowering short-term interest rates and the money supply
baby
Noun
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A baby is a very young child, less than two years old, who has not yet learned how to speak.
I used to be a baby but now I am an adult.
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A baby is a young animal.
A baby cat is called a kitten.
baby
Verb
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If you baby someone, you treat him gently and pamper him.
Mom, don't baby me - I can do it myself!