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jar | meaning of jar in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English | LDOCE

From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary EnglishUtensils, Drinkjarjar1 /dʒɑː $ dʒɑːr/ ●●● S3 noun [countable]    1 DFUa glass container with a wide top and a lid, used for storing food such as jam or honey, or the amount it contains  a jam jar  half a jar of peanut butter2 DFUa container made of clay, stone etc, used especially in the past for keeping food or drink in3 British English informalDFD a glass of beer  We’d had a few jars down the pub.Examples from the CorpusjarHe picked up a jar large enough to hold a fetus in formaldehyde.a cookie jarAnalysis Have each group use two different jars and draw what they see through the lenses as accurately as possible.Each jar or bottle must be completely filled with water.a honey jarI could see her working out how many jars she'd be able to carry in her hand luggage.Note 1 x 500g can or jar of sauce serves 4, or allow l25g per person.She stood more firmly on the jar.Close the lid on the jar. 6. jarjar2 verb (jarred, jarring)    1 [intransitive, transitive]ANNOY to make someone feel annoyed or shocked  His enthusiasm jarred.  His words jarred Harriet.jar on  The screaming was starting to jar on my nerves.2 [intransitive, transitive]HURT/CAUSE PAIN to shake or hit something in a way that damages it or makes it loose  Alice landed badly, jarring her ankle.3 WRONG/UNSUITABLE[intransitive] to be different in style or appearance from something else and therefore look strange SYN clashjar with  There was a modern lamp that jarred with the rest of the room.jarring adjective→ See Verb tableExamples from the CorpusjarDon't use the other person's name or use it artificially so that it jars.These would be plastic jugs, glass jars, all kinds of bottles.Their laughter jarred and confused me.O'Neal jarred the ball loose from Marino.He kicked and usually punched, but his size and strength produced blows that jarred the body and caused lapses in consciousness.Accidents in sport, whether to the ribs, legs, feet, head or shoulders, nearly always jar the spine.Even popular television war comedies were taken off the air, for fear of jarring too awkwardly with endless hours of Gulf coverage.Origin jar1 (1500-1600) Old Provençal jarra, from Arabic jarrah pot for carrying water jar2 (1400-1500) Probably from the sound