[f. prec. sb.] trans. To put into a cellar; to store up as in a cellar. Also, To cellar in, and fig.
a. 1687. Cotton, Winter, xxxix. 153. There underground a magazine Of sovereign juice is cellard in.
1677. R. Cary, Chronol., I. I. I. vii. 23. They had ended their Vintage and were ready to Seller their Wine.
1873. W. S. Mayo, Never Again, ii. 17. His sympathies cellared in the depths of his own mind.
1885. Law Times, LXXX. 191/1. A pipe of port wine, which was cellared for the plaintiffs.
1886. Athenæum, 3 July, 18/2. New fashions of cellaring and storing bottled wine