canned

Multiple Entries:
  canned    can  

Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
canned/kand/
adjective
  • 1 preserved in a sealed can.
  • 2 informal, chiefly derogatory (of music, applause, etc.) pre-recorded.
  • 3 informal drunk.

Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
can1
modal verb (3rd sing. present can; past could)
  • 1 be able to.

    ■ [with neg. or in questions] used to express doubt or surprise: he can't have finished.

    ■ used to indicate that something is typically the case: he could be very moody.

  • 2 be permitted to.
– origin OE cunnan ‘know’.
usage: The use of can rather than may to request or express permission, as in may/can I ask you a few questions?, is not incorrect in standard English, although some people object to it. May is, generally speaking, a more polite way of asking for something, however, and is the better choice in more formal contexts.



Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
can2
noun
  • 1 a cylindrical metal container, in particular one in which food or drink is hermetically sealed for storage over long periods.
  • 2 (the can) N. Amer. informal prison.
  • 3 (the can) N. Amer. informal a toilet.
  • 4 (cans) informal headphones.
verb (cans, canning, canned)
  • 1 preserve in a can.
  • 2 N. Amer. informal dismiss from a job or reject as inadequate.
– phrases
a can of worms a complicated matter likely to prove awkward or embarrassing.
in the can informal on tape or film and ready to be broadcast or released.
– derivatives
canner noun.
– origin OE canne, either of Gmc origin or from late L. canna.
'canned' also found in these Oxford entries:

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