Contained or stored in a bottle, especially referring to beverages or other liquids that have been commercially packaged.
From Middle English botel, from Old French bouteille, ultimately from Late Latin butticula meaning 'small cask'. The past participle form developed as bottling became a commercial process in the 18th-19th centuries.
The phrase 'bottled water' seems redundant since all water was once 'bottled' in some container, but it specifically emerged to distinguish commercially packaged water from tap water. Interestingly, 'bottled up' emotions use the same metaphor of containment but suggest pressure building inside.
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