flask

See also: fläsk

English

A French stoneware pilgrim flask.
Three Erlenmeyer flasks.
Hip flask.

Etymology

From Middle English flask, flaske (case, cask, keg), from Anglo-Norman flascon, from Late Latin flascō (bottle), from Frankish *flasko, *flaska (whence also Dutch fles), from Proto-Germanic *flaskǭ (braid-covered bottle, wicker-enclosed jug) (whence also Old English flaxe, flasce, German Flasche), from Proto-Indo-European *ploḱ-skō (flat) (whence also Lithuanian plókščias, Czech ploský, Albanian flashkët).

Sense 2 from Italian fiasco and sense 3 from Middle French flasque (powder flask), itself from Old Spanish flasco, frasco, both from Late Latin above.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: fläsk, IPA(key): /flɑːsk/
  • enPR: flăsk, IPA(key): /flæsk/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -æsk

Noun

flask (plural flasks)

  1. A narrow-necked vessel of metal or glass, used for various purposes; as of sheet metal, to carry gunpowder in; or of wrought iron, to contain quicksilver; or of glass, to heat water in, etc.
  2. A container used to discreetly carry a small amount of a hard alcoholic beverage; a pocket flask.
  3. (sciences) Laboratory glassware used to hold larger volumes than test tubes, normally having a narrow mouth of a standard size which widens to a flat or spherical base.
  4. (engineering) A container for holding a casting mold, especially for sand casting molds.
  5. A bed in a gun carriage.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Bailey to this entry?)

Translations

Verb

flask (third-person singular simple present flasks, present participle flasking, simple past and past participle flasked)

  1. (dentistry) To invest a denture in a flask so as to produce a sectional mold.

Anagrams


Danish

Verb

flask

  1. imperative of flaske

Dutch

Etymology

From French flasque (flask). Doublette with (native) fles (bottle), (through French) flacon (flagon) and (through Italian) fiasco (fiasco).

Noun

flask f (plural flasken, diminutive flaskje n)

  1. flask

Middle English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Anglo-Norman flascon, from Frankish *flaska, from Proto-Germanic *flaskǭ. Also reinforced by existing Old English flasce, also from Proto-Germanic *flaskǭ.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈflask(ə)/

Noun

flask (plural flaskes)

  1. (rare) A small barrel for beer storage.
  2. (rare) A container for the storage of garments.

Descendants

References

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