Definition of Flacket

1. n. A barrel-shaped bottle; a flagon.

Definition of Flacket

1. Noun. A barrel-shaped bottle; a flagon. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Flacket

1. a flask [n -S] - See also: flask

Lexicographical Neighbors of Flacket

flaccid membrane
flaccid paralysis
flaccid part of tympanic membrane
flaccider
flaccidities
flaccidity
flaccidly
flack
flack catcher
flacked
flacker
flackered
flackeries
flackers
flackery
flacket (current term)
flackets
flacking
flacks
flacon
flacons
flacourtia family
fladries
fladry
flaff
flaffed
flaffer
flaffered
flaffers
flaffing

Literary usage of Flacket

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Glossary of Tudor and Stuart Words: Especially from the Dramatists by Walter William Skeat, Anthony Lawson Mayhew (1914)
"45. fixation, in alchemy; the process that rendered the elixir fixed. B. Jonson, Alchem. ii. 1 (Subtle). flacket, a flask, bottle, or vessel; ..."

2. Le Morte Darthur: Sir Thomas Malory's Book of King Arthur and His Noble by Thomas Malory, Edward Strachey, William Caxton (1901)
"... of gold stand by them, and it seemed by the colour and the taste that it was noble wine. Then Sir Tristram took the flacket in his hand, and said, ..."

3. English Prose: Selections by Henry Craik (1893)
"... of gold stand by them, and it seemed by the colour and the taste that it was noble wine. Then Sir Tristram took the flacket in his hand, and said, ..."

4. Le Morte Darthur of Sir Thomas Malory & Its Sources by Vida Dutton Scudder (1917)
"... of gold stand by them, and it seemed by the color and the taste that it was noble wine. Then Sir Tristram took the flacket in his hand and said, ..."

5. La Mort D'Arthure: The History of King Arthur and of the Knights of the by Thomas Malory (1858)
"So sir Tristram tooke the flacket in his hand, and said," Madame ... and in some cases was extended even to the making of poisons. 1 flacket. ..."

6. English Prose: Selections with Critical Introductions by Various Writers and by Henry Craik (1916)
"... of gold stand by them, and it seemed by the colour and the taste that it was noble wine. Then Sir Tristram took the flacket in his hand, and said, ..."

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