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  1. Dictionary
    jar
    /dʒɑː/

    verb

    noun

    • 1. a physical shock or jolt: "the train stopped without the slightest jar"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. JAR definition: 1. a glass or clay container with a wide opening at the top and sometimes a fitted lid, usually…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of JAR is a widemouthed container made typically of earthenware or glass. How to use jar in a sentence.

  4. Jar definition: a broad-mouthed container, usually cylindrical and of glass or earthenware. See examples of JAR used in a sentence.

  5. a container made of glass, stone, earthenware, etc., usually cylindrical, with a large opening and no spout: some jars have handles 2. as much as a jar will hold

  6. JAR definition: 1. a glass container used for storing food: 2. to move suddenly, hitting something and causing…. Learn more.

  7. 1. A cylindrical glass or earthenware vessel with a wide mouth and usually no handles. 2. The amount that a jar can hold. 3. Chiefly British A glass of beer. tr.v. jarred, jar·ring, jars. To put into a jar.

  8. Definition of jar noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. jar. noun. /dʒɑː (r)/ /dʒɑːr/ [countable] a round glass container, with a lid (= cover), used for storing food, especially jam, honey, etc. a storage jar. see also jam jar, Kilner jar™, Mason jar. Extra Examples. Topics Cooking and eating b2. Oxford Collocations Dictionary.

  9. A jar is a smooth-sided, round container that's often made of glass. Jars are useful for storing food, from rice to tea bags to cookies. A wide-mouth jar made of pottery might hold Oreos, and a small, short jar could contain homemade jam. When you put something in a jar, you jar it.

  10. Jar definition: A cylindrical glass or earthenware vessel with a wide mouth and usually no handles.

  11. a broad-mouthed container, usually cylindrical and of glass or earthenware: a cookie jar. the quantity such a container can or does hold. Arabic jarrah earthen water vessel. Old Provencal jarra. Middle French jarre. 1585–95. jar′less, adj. jar2 ( jär), v., jarred, jar•ring, n. v.i.