bell
1
[ bel ]
/ bɛl /
noun
verb (used with object)
to cause to swell or expand like a bell (often followed by out): Belling out the tubes will permit a freer passage of air.
to put a bell on.
verb (used without object)
to take or have the form of a bell.
Botany.
to produce bells; be in bell (said of hops when the seed vessels are forming).
Idioms for bell
Origin of bell
1OTHER WORDS FROM bell
bell-less, adjectiveWords nearby bell
belitung,
belive,
belize,
belize city,
belizean,
bell,
bell arch,
bell beaker,
bell book,
bell bronze,
bell buoy
British Dictionary definitions for saved by the bell (1 of 3)
bell
1
/ (bɛl) /
noun
verb
Word Origin for bell
Old English
belle; related to Old Norse
bjalla, Middle Low German
bell; see
bell ²
British Dictionary definitions for saved by the bell (2 of 3)
bell
2
/ (bɛl) /
noun
a bellowing or baying cry, esp that of a hound or a male deer in rut
verb
to utter (such a cry)
Word Origin for bell
Old English
bellan; related to Old Norse
belja to bellow, Old High German
bellan to roar, Sanskrit
bhāsate he talks; see
bellow
British Dictionary definitions for saved by the bell (3 of 3)
Bell
/ (bɛl) /
noun
Medical definitions for saved by the bell
Bell
[ bĕl ]
British anatomist and surgeon who published detailed anatomies of the nervous system and the brain. He was the first to distinguish between sensory and motor nerves. Bell's Law and Bell's palsy are named for him.
Scientific definitions for saved by the bell
Bell
[ bĕl ]
Scottish-born American scientist and inventor whose lifelong interest in the education of deaf people led him to conceive the idea of transmitting speech by electric waves. In 1876 his experiments with a telegraph resulted in his invention of the telephone. He later produced the first successful sound recorder, an early hearing aid, and many other devices.
Idioms and Phrases with saved by the bell (1 of 2)
saved by the bell
Rescued from a difficulty at the last moment, as in I couldn't put off explaining his absence any longer, but then Bill arrived and I was saved by the bell. This expression alludes to the bell rung at the end of a boxing round, which, if it rings before a knocked-down boxer has been counted out, lets him get up and continue fighting in the next round. Its figurative use dates from the mid-1900s.
Idioms and Phrases with saved by the bell (2 of 2)
bell