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cellar
[sel-er]
noun
a room, or set of rooms, for the storage of food, fuel, etc., wholly or partly underground and usually beneath a building.
an underground room or story.
Sports., the lowest position in a group ranked in order of games won.
The team was in the cellar for most of the season.
verb (used with object)
to place or store in a cellar.
cellar
/ ˈsɛlə /
noun
an underground room, rooms, or storey of a building, usually used for storage Compare basement
a place where wine is stored
a stock of bottled wines
verb
(tr) to store in a cellar
Other Word Forms
- cellarless adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of cellar1
Example Sentences
Court documents related to the Great Train Robbery have been found inside a locked safe in a cellar.
Tourism is a major part of the business for many Welsh wine producers who offer tours and tasting events resulting in a large proportion of sales at the "cellar door".
In 1965, Stamp starred in an adaptation of the John Fowles novel The Collector, as the repressed Frederick Clegg who kidnaps a girl and imprisons her in his cellar.
People are thought to have lived in the upper floors of homes above the ash below, with the lower floors converted into cellars.
What seemed scarier, perhaps, was that the team doing the damage spent most of the season fighting to crawl out of the league’s cellar.
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