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Basket   /bˈæskət/   Listen
noun
Basket  n.  
1.
A vessel made of osiers or other twigs, cane, rushes, splints, or other flexible material, interwoven. "Rude baskets... woven of the flexile willow."
2.
The contents of a basket; as much as a basket contains; as, a basket of peaches.
3.
(Arch.) The bell or vase of the Corinthian capital. (Improperly so used.)
4.
The two back seats facing one another on the outside of a stagecoach. (Eng.)
5.
A container shaped like a basket (1), even if made of solid material rather than woven; the top is often, but not always, open and without a lid.
6.
A vessel suspended below a balloon, designed to carry people or measuring instruments for scientific research. Note: The earliest balloons designed to carry people often had small vessels of woven flexible vegetable materials to hold the passengers, which resembled large baskets (1), from which the name was derived.
7.
(Basketball) A goal (3) consisting of a short cylindrical net suspended from a circular rim, which itself is attached at about ten feet above floor level to a backboard, placed at the end of a basketball court. In professional basketball, two such baskets are used, one at each end of the court, and each team may score only by passing the ball though its own basket. In informal games, only one such basket is often used.
8.
(Basketball) An instance of scoring points by throwing the basketball through the basket; as, he threw four baskets in the first quarter; the ball must pass through the basket from above in order to score points.
Basket fish (Zool.), an ophiuran of the genus Astrophyton, having the arms much branched. See Astrophyton.
Basket hilt, a hilt with a covering wrought like basketwork to protect the hand. Hence,
Basket work, work consisting of plaited osiers or twigs.
Basket worm (Zool.), a lepidopterous insect of the genus Thyridopteryx and allied genera, esp. Thyridopteryx ephemeraeformis. The larva makes and carries about a bag or basket-like case of silk and twigs, which it afterwards hangs up to shelter the pupa and wingless adult females.
collection basket, a small basket (1) mounted on the end of a pole, used in churches to collect donations from those attending a church service; the long pole allows the collector to hold the basket in front of those at the end of the pew, while the collector remains in the aisle.
waste basket, a basket (4) used to hold waste matter, such as discarded paper, commonly shaped like a truncated cone, with the wide end open and at the top. Vessels of other shapes, such as oblong containers, are also called waste baskets.



verb
Basket  v. t.  To put into a basket. (R.)






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Basket" Quotes from Famous Books



... doings and failures to do, and lied as tenderly as an epitaph about my disappearance from London, I cut them up and burned them. But when they forgot me, and began to treat of other people's triumphs, I made Neilus my waste-paper basket, on the understanding that the papers were to go to the fishermen just home from Kinsale. Then from time to time he told me they were 'goin' round, miss, goin' round,' and gave me other assurances of 'the greatest circulation in the world,' which was true enough certainly, though the old ...
— The Christian - A Story • Hall Caine

... of very young idiots, and I trusted to that; but you opened your puppy eyes at the time I hadn't counted on, with the help of Luttrell's scouting nose." He paused, as if not right sure that he was going to tell about everything, and as he looked at us we did look like a basket of little silly puppies with mouths and eyes wide open—the ...
— Phyllis • Maria Thompson Daviess

... had heard a long time before that whoever wanted to pass these lions safely must throw to them a cake made of millet flour, sugar-candy, and crocodile's eggs. This cake she prepared with her own hands, and putting it in a little basket, she set out to seek the Fairy. But as she was not used to walking far, she soon felt very tired and sat down at the foot of a tree to rest, and presently fell fast asleep. When she awoke she was dismayed ...
— The Blue Fairy Book • Various

... stamped the snow off his boots as he entered a glass-fronted veranda in front of the hotel. It was comfortably furnished, warm, and occupied by three people. A lady sat with some sewing at a table, and a very pretty girl, holding a cigarette case, leaned over the side of a basket chair, in which a man reclined. Foster, who imagined he was an invalid by his slack pose, was passing on to the main door when the man moved. As he turned to take a cigarette Foster ...
— Carmen's Messenger • Harold Bindloss

... the positive side of The Way of all Flesh' is concerned, Butler's eggs are all in one basket. If the adult Ernest does not materialise, the book hangs in empty air. Whatever it may be instead it is not a great novel, nor even a good one. So much established, we may begin to collect the good things. Christina is the best of them. She is, by any standard, a remarkable creation. Butler ...
— Aspects of Literature • J. Middleton Murry


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