| Noun | 1. | capsule - a small container container - any object that can be used to hold things (especially a large metal boxlike object of standardized dimensions that can be loaded from one form of transport to another) paintball - a capsule filled with water-soluble dye used as a projectile in playing the game of paintball |
| 2. | capsule - a pill in the form of a small rounded gelatinous container with medicine inside | |
| 3. | capsule - a dry dehiscent seed vessel or the spore-containing structure of e.g. mosses pericarp, seed vessel - the ripened and variously modified walls of a plant ovary bilocular capsule - a capsule divided into two cells or compartments boll - the rounded seed-bearing capsule of a cotton or flax plant peristome - (botany) fringe of toothlike appendages surrounding the mouth of a moss capsule | |
| 4. | capsule - a shortened version of a written work | |
| 5. | capsule - a structure that encloses a body part anatomical structure, bodily structure, body structure, complex body part, structure - a particular complex anatomical part of a living thing; "he has good bone structure" malpighian body, malpighian corpuscle, renal corpuscle - the capsule that contains Bowman's capsule and a glomerulus at the expanded end of a nephron lens capsule - a tenuous mesoblastic membrane surrounding the lens of the eye | |
| 6. | capsule - a spacecraft designed to transport people and support human life in outer spaceballistic capsule, space vehicle, spacecraft - a craft capable of traveling in outer space; technically, a satellite around the sun | |
| 7. | capsule - a pilot's seat in an airplane that can be forcibly ejected in the case of an emergency; then the pilot descends by parachutecockpit - compartment where the pilot sits while flying the aircraft seat - any support where you can sit (especially the part of a chair or bench etc. on which you sit); "he dusted off the seat before sitting down" | |
| Verb | 1. | capsule - enclose in a capsule |
| 2. | capsule - put in a short or concise form; reduce in volume; "capsulize the news" |