CELLAR


Meaning of CELLAR in English

I. ˈselə(r) noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English celer, from Anglo-French, from Latin cellarium, from cella small room, storeroom — more at cell

1.

a. archaic : an above-ground storeroom for foodstuff or produce (as a pantry or granary)

b. : a room or set of rooms below the ground often used for storage and for protecting the building above from ground dampness and sometimes not possessing a finished interior — sometimes distinguished from basement

c. : an underground room (as one partitioned off in a basement or one dug in the earth and often roofed over with sod) used to store provisions (as vegetables) or as a refuge — see cyclone cellar

d. : the bottommost stage or rank

their spirits were in the cellar

especially : the lowest place in the standings of an athletic league or conference

2. : a stock of wine

a cellar depleted by festivities

3. obsolete : a case especially for holding bottles

II. transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

: to put into a cellar (as for storage)

III. noun

( -s )

Etymology: by shortening

: saltcellar

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.