Dictionary Definition
wastebasket n : a container with an open top; for
discarded paper and other rubbish [syn: wastepaper
basket, waste-paper
basket, waste
basket, circular
file]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
See also
Extensive Definition
A waste container is a container for temporarily
storing waste, which is usually made out of metal or plastic. Common terms are
dustbin, rubbish bin, litter bin, garbage can, trash can, trash
bin, dumpster, trash barrel, and rubbish barrel; the word can
generally refers to a container made out of metal.
Explanation
Indoor bins
Indoor bins are traditionally kept in the kitchen to dispose of culinary excess such as fruit peelings or bottles, although there are also wastepaper baskets or wastebaskets which are used in offices to dispose of waste paper and other office refuse. Sometimes a bin can simply be referred to as "the garbage" or "the trash", in an example of a question, such as when one might ask "Where's the bin?" in an unfamiliar kitchen.Most bins have heavy lids on the top to seal in
the odor that garbage tends to
emit. Though most have to be opened manually, indoor bins sometimes
have pedals which open the lid when stomped on. Many bins are now
water tight and need to be checked to stop leaking.
Indoor bins are traditionally lined with bin bags, which
keeps the bin itself clean, facilitates the removal of the garbage and allows disposal with
minimal contact to the contents. A common practice is to place
multiple bags in each bin once a day so that one can empty the
container by removing the bag and not have to replace it, speeding
up the process.
Rubbish is usually
kept in these receptacles until full, at which point they are
transferred via the aforementioned bin bags to an outside receptacle such
as a dumpster, or simply to the roadside.
Curbside dustbins
The curbside dustbins usually consist of three types: trash cans (receptacles often made of tin, steel or plastic), Dumpsters (large receptacles similar to skips) and wheelie bins (light, usually plastic bins that are mobile). All of these are emptied by collectors, who will load the contents into a garbage truck and drive it to a landfill, incinerator or waste sorting facility to be disposed of.In some areas there is also a recycling service, often with
one or more dedicated bins intended to receive items that can be
recycled into new
products. These bins are separated into different categories
(usually represented by colours) which determine what materials can
be inserted into the bin. The most common materials used for
recycling are paper, glass, metal, plastics and "green waste"
(compostable material, either garden waste or food scraps or both).
The contents of the bins are taken to a recycling
plant to be processed, and there are various systems for
recycling bin collection: single bin combined stream systems,
multiple bin systems, and cyclic collections with different
materials collected on different days. Due to the over flow of
trash, the world today is slowly being consumed by the waste of
humans. In about 2300, the world will be over filled by
trash.
Bins in public areas
Certain public areas such as parks have litter bins which are placed alongside paths frequently walked by visitors. This encourages people to avoid littering, which creates an unhealthy and aesthetically unpleasant social environment.Bins in outdoor locations or other busy public areas are usually mounted
to the ground or wall. This discourages theft, and also reduces vandalism by making it harder
for someone to physically move or maneuver the bins; to spill their
contents on the ground for example, or to use the bin as an
effective weapon to hit people over the back with.
In the past terrorists have left
improvised explosive devices in bins. The bomb is much less
likely to be spotted than an unattended bag and the metal bins
provide extra shrapnel
that injures people nearby when it detonates. For this reason there
are no bins in most railway
stations, most airports, and many shopping
centres in the United
Kingdom, or if they are provided they are just a bin bag
hanging from a metal loop.
Apartment buildings often have two Dust flumes in
which residents can dispose of their trash. These chutes usually
lead to some large receptacle in the basement.
Waste Bins and other uses of the term in Popular Culture
The term 'garbage can' is also used for a model of decision making, the Garbage Can Model of decision making. It is concerned with cases of decision making in great aggregate uncertainty which can cause decisions to arise that from a distant point of view might seem irrational.A "Trash
can" metaphor is sometimes used for a place on computers which
stores a collection of deleted files. Called "Trash" on an Apple
Macintosh, BeOS, and other
systems. Called the "Recycle Bin" on Microsoft
Windows. Formerly known as "Trash" and "Wastebasket" on
GNOME desktop
environments, it is now simply called "Deleted Items" -- the "trash
can" icon remains intact, though.
A bin can also be used for recycling, such as a
'Bottle' bin, commonly found near supermarkets and trash
piles.
In a workplace setting, a bin may be
euphemistically called the circular file. Whereas useful documents
are filed in a filing
cabinet, which is rectangular, junk mail and other worthless
items are "filed" in the bin, which is often round.
In popular culture, on the children's television
series Sesame
Street, the character Oscar the
Grouch lives inside a trash can.
In police
procedural mystery stories, a waste bin is sometimes used as a
location for a dead
drop.
In literature, in the novel The
Crying of Lot 49 by Thomas
Pynchon, waste bins are central to a secret conspiracy. The
bins actually function as mailboxes. In the book, the word "WASTE"
secretly stands for "We Await Silent Tristero's Empire."
Waste bins are also sometimes used as musical
instruments, particularly by percussion
ensembles like Stomp
(dance troupe) and the Blue Man
Group. For example, The Blue Man Group plays the "dumpstulum,"
two steel dumpsters lying on their sides.
The 'bin police'
Bin police are a new development in the
concentration of focus upon recycling and so called green
issues. Bin police have been put throughout parts of the UK as a
pilot scheme but are growing in numbers.
Critics argue that the bin police are useless
since they have no real power and people are unlikley to take
notice but this is disputed by the New Labour government.
See also
Footnotes
commons Trash
container
wastebasket in Czech: Popelnice
wastebasket in German: Abfalleimer
wastebasket in Spanish: Cubo de basura
wastebasket in Esperanto: Rubujo
wastebasket in French: Poubelle
wastebasket in Scottish Gaelic:
Basgaid-sgudail
wastebasket in Korean: 쓰레기통
wastebasket in Dutch: Vuilnisbak
wastebasket in Japanese: ごみ箱
wastebasket in Polish: Kubeł na śmieci
wastebasket in Portuguese: Lixeira
wastebasket in Russian: Мусорная урна
wastebasket in Simple English: Waste
container
wastebasket in Finnish: Roska-astia
wastebasket in Swedish: Soptunna
wastebasket in Chinese: 垃圾桶