bin
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 5
- Words With Friends
- 7
- Letters
- 3
Definition of bin
16 senses · 4 parts of speech · etymology included
noun
-
A box, frame, crib, or enclosed place, used as a storage container.
“a corn bin”
“a wine bin”
“a coal bin”
See all 16 definitions Show less
noun
-
A box, frame, crib, or enclosed place, used as a storage container.
“a corn bin”
“a wine bin”
“a coal bin”
-
A container for rubbish or waste.
“a rubbish bin”
“a wastepaper bin”
“an ashes bin”
“British journalists shun complete respectability, feeling a duty to be ready to savage the mighty, or rummage through their bins. Elsewhere in Europe, government contracts and subsidies ensure that press barons will only defy the mighty so far.”
- Any of the discrete intervals in a histogram, etc
- Any of the fixed-size chunks into which airspace is divided for the purposes of radar.
-
(Multicultural-London-English, slang, uncommon)Jail or prison.
“Free up my G's locked in the bin Jail house comin' like subs one comes out then one goes in”
-
(abbreviation, alt-of, ellipsis, slang)Ellipsis of loony bin (“lunatic asylum”).
“At the moment, and in "an emergency", you or I could be sent to the bin, willy-nilly, on the say-so of a single doctor (who may never have seen us before, and need have no particular experience of mental illness), so long as the application is supported by one of our relatives, or by a "social worker".”
““She’s crazy,” I said. “She should be in a bin.””
- A digital file folder for organising media in a non-linear editing program.
- son of; equivalent to Hebrew בן (ben).
- (abbreviation, alt-of, clipping, countable, uncountable)Clipping of binary.
verb
-
(British, informal)To dispose of (something) by putting it into a bin, or as if putting it into a bin.
“He put the bank statement in the shoebox marked "Bank Statements" and binned the rest.”
-
(British, informal)To throw away, reject, give up.
“This splendid eloquence was promptly binned by the pope, […]”
“The CC [Co-ordinating Centre] had long since binned the idea of catching the regular shuttle service, […]”
“NR also wants more effort made to bin out-of-date 1970s technology, but only replacing it with equipment that meets customer needs, rather than high-tech kit just for the sake of it.”
- To convert continuous data into discrete groups.
-
(transitive)To place into a bin for storage.
“to bin wine”
-
(Internet, alt-of, alternative, dialectal, obsolete)Alternative form of been.
“Many of the lupus piscis I have seen, and have bin informed by the king's fishmonger they are taken on our coast […]”
contraction
- (Internet, abbreviation, alt-of, contraction)Contraction of being.
name
- A surname from Chinese.
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
From Middle English bynne, from Old English binn (“crib, manger”), from Late Latin benna or a Celtic language, possibly Proto-Brythonic *benn (“cart, carriage”) (whence Middle Welsh benn, Old Breton benn…
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From Middle English bynne, from Old English binn (“crib, manger”), from Late Latin benna or a Celtic language, possibly Proto-Brythonic *benn (“cart, carriage”) (whence Middle Welsh benn, Old Breton benn (“caisson”), modern Welsh ben), from Proto-Celtic *bend(n)ā (whence Gaulish benna). Compare German Benne (“wheelbarrow”) and Middle Dutch benne (“basket”), whence modern Dutch ben and as a borrowing, West Frisian bin (both "wicker basket").
Words you can make from bin
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