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  1. Dictionary
    bar
    /bär/

    noun

    • 1. a long rod or rigid piece of wood, metal, or similar material, typically used as an obstruction, fastening, or weapon: "an iron bar" Similar rodpolestakestick
    • 2. a counter across which alcoholic drinks or refreshments are served: "standing at the bar" Similar countertablebuffetstand

    verb

    preposition

    • 1. except for; apart from: British "everyone, bar a few ascetics, thinks it desirable"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Jul 3, 2012 · The meaning of BAR is a straight piece (as of wood or metal) that is longer than it is wide and has any of various uses (as for a lever, support, barrier, or fastening). How to use bar in a sentence.

  3. BAR definition: 1. a place where drinks, especially alcoholic drinks, are sold and drunk, or the area in such a…. Learn more.

  4. Bar definition: a relatively long, evenly shaped piece of some solid substance, as metal or wood, used as a guard or obstruction or for some mechanical purpose. See examples of BAR used in a sentence.

  5. BAR meaning: 1. a place where drinks, especially alcoholic drinks, are sold and drunk, or the area in such a…. Learn more.

  6. bar in British English. (bɑː ) noun. 1. a rigid usually straight length of metal, wood, etc, that is longer than it is wide or thick, used esp as a barrier or as a structural or mechanical part. a bar of a gate. 2. a solid usually rectangular block of any material. a bar of soap.

  7. Definition of bar noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. a place where alcoholic drinks are sold and drunk, or the area behind the person serving the drinks: I met him in a bar in Soho. Fewer examples. Jazz legend, Ella Fitzgerald, once sang in this bar. They went off in search of a bar. They were arrested for smashing up a hotel bar.

  9. Bar is one of those handy words with many different meanings. There's the kind of bar where you order coffee or a drink. There is also the bar that a bartender keeps close at hand in case she needs a weapon when patrons get rowdy — like a long piece of metal. And when you bar something, you make it inaccessible in some way.

  10. a long rigid piece of wood, metal, or similar material, typically used as an obstruction, fastening, or weapon an iron bar bars on the windows an amount of food or another substance formed into a narrow block a bar of chocolate gold bars a band of colour or light bars of sunlight shafting through the windows (British English) the heating ...

  11. a : a building or room where alcoholic drinks and sometimes food are served. We went to a bar for a drink. — see also sports bar, tiki bar. b : a counter where alcoholic drinks are served. We sat at the restaurant's bar while we were waiting for a table. — see also cash bar, open bar, wet bar.

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