mortar

1
[ mawr-ter ]
/ ˈmɔr tər /

noun

a receptacle of hard material, having a bowl-shaped cavity in which substances are reduced to powder with a pestle.
any of various mechanical appliances in which substances are pounded or ground.
a cannon very short in proportion to its bore, for throwing shells at high angles.
some similar contrivance, as for throwing pyrotechnic bombs or a lifeline.

verb (used with or without object)

to attack with mortar fire or shells.

Origin of mortar

1
before 1000; Middle English, Old English mortere and Old French mortier < Latin mortārium; (defs 3, 4) translation of French mortier < Latin, as above; see -ar2

Definition for mortar (2 of 2)

mortar 2
[ mawr-ter ]
/ ˈmɔr tər /

noun

a mixture of lime or cement or a combination of both with sand and water, used as a bonding agent between bricks, stones, etc.
any of various materials or compounds for bonding together bricks, stones, etc.: Bitumen was used as a mortar.

verb (used with object)

to plaster or fix with mortar.

Origin of mortar

2
1250–1300; Middle English morter < Anglo-French; Old French mortier mortar1, hence the mixture produced in it

OTHER WORDS FROM mortar

mor·tar·less, adjective mor·tar·y, adjective

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH mortar

cement concrete mortar

Example sentences from the Web for mortar

British Dictionary definitions for mortar

mortar
/ (ˈmɔːtə) /

noun

verb (tr)

Word Origin for mortar

C13: from Latin mortārium basin in which mortar is mixed; in some senses, via Old French mortier substance mixed inside such a vessel

Medical definitions for mortar

mortar
[ môrtər ]

n.

A vessel in which drugs or other substances are crushed or ground with a pestle.
A machine in which materials are ground and blended or crushed.

Idioms and Phrases with mortar

mortar

see bricks and mortar.