Bottle dream meaning is explained below using 26 different sources. Each interpretation is shown with its source.
Interpretation 1 — Martha Clarke
Dreaming of bottles filled with water is a symbol of prosperity and joy; if they contain liquor it indicates that your feelings are not sincere: unpleasant incidents with the beloved are likely to occur; if it is champagne, you need to be more social; if it is poison, it represents evil thoughts on your part; if it is red wine, it will express your passions; and milk demonstrates your need for new ideas. Empty bottles indicate amorous disappointments, illness, or setbacks in your projects. You may be out of your internal resources and feel hollow. Despite the disappointments, you must try to recover and move on, and dreams may point out the way to do it.
Interpretation 2 — Garuda
A broken bottle or breaking a bottle means bad news.
A full bottle of red wine is a good sign, promising prosperity.
Depth Psychology: A bottle is sometimes a symbol for sexual cravings, but it also indicates that personal and professional possibilities may be limited. Do you feel like an (empty) vessel? Did others imply that you are? Did you make a mistake, miss something? Do you have a tendency to put yourself down? Do others put you down?
Interpretation 3 — Ibn Seerin
The same interpretation is given for blowing air or inflating any sack or a balloon. Seeing a bottle of water in a dream may denote a wife, a husband, a host, a merchant, or a pregnant woman.
(Also see Glass bottle)
Interpretation 4 — myjellybean
If it was empty, it could mean a sudden setback related to money, a job or school.
If you spilled a bottle of something, you can expect irritations and quarrels with friends or family.
If someone hit you with a bottle, you will have an improvement in social status.
If you struck someone with a bottle, it signifies a coming embarrassment.
If you dreamed of a broken bottle, you may be rushing toward something unpleasant. Slow down and consider changing the direction your life is headed. Also see “Baby Bottle.”
Interpretation 5 — Dr. Mıchael Lennox
If the symbolic meaning behind what’s in the bottle is to nurture you or please your palate, then the meaning of the bottle is your ability to contain that desire in a portable way and enjoy it at your leisure. An empty bottle relates to something you had in the past being unavailable to you now.
A bottle that is broken indicates an inability to contain something pleasurable.
If you know what is in the bottle, add that for a great distinction of your interpretation.
Interpretation 6 — Pamela Ball
To see a baby’s feeding bottle would indicate the need to be successfully- nurtured and helped to grow.
A bottle of alcohol would show the need to celebrate, or to curb an excess, while a medicine bottle might symbolise the need to look at one’s own health.
A broken bottle could indicate either aggression or failure.
2- Opening a bottle could mean making available resources you have, but may have suppressed.
3- A womb symbol: the principle of containing and enclosure.
Interpretation 7 — Eric Ackroyd
(2) If the bottle is not empty, the meaning may be provided by the contents - wine, for example, or poison.
See also Poison, Wine.
(3) If the bottle is empty, it probably represents your own (feeling of) emptiness. Do you feel drained, exhausted? Has all the enjoyment gone out of life? If so, ask your unconscious to put you in touch with appropriate inner resources, then observe your dreams carefully over the next week or so.
Interpretation 8 — Zolar
breaking, a: not wise to ask for financial assistance at this time.
empty, an: misfortune from having drunk too much adversity.
floating ashore, a: God has given you the answer.
full, a: prosperity in business and conquest in love.
neck: are squeezing through a constricted scheme.
several: a party invitation wil lead to prosperous engagements.
spilling the contents of: expect domestic worries.
Interpretation 9 — Nancy Wagaman
Containment or control.
Abundance.
The idea of generosity or something else “pouring forth.” The idea of flowing, free-flow, or controlled flow (such as of a process or activity).
Consider also the meaning of whatever’s inside the container, and the role of the container with respect to it.
See Drinking, Liquid, Container
Interpretation 10 — Dream Explanations - Anonymous
If you dream of a baby bottle, then this is a symbol of nurturing empowerment.
If you dream of a beer or wine bottle, then this represents that you are attempting to nurture yourself while keeping at arms length from reality.
If you dream of a message in a bottle, consider the message to be a profound insight regarding your current circumstances.
Interpretation 11 — Versatile - Anonymous
A bottle of alcohol would show the need to celebrate, or to curb an excess, while a medicine bottle might symbolize the need to look at one’s own health.
Interpretation 12 — James R. Lewis and Evelyn Dorothy Oliver
Interpretation 13 — Betty Bethards
If you receive a message from floating bottle, one washed up by the sea, the unconscious self is offering an answer to a problem.
Interpretation 14 — Versatile - Anonymous
Interpretation 15 — Stearn Robinson - Tom Corbett
If the bottle was full, it forecasts quick prosperity; if empty, sud- den reverses.
If you spilled the contents, you can ex- pect petty worries and do- mestic quarrels.
Interpretation 16 — Tony Crisp
Interpretation 17 — Versatile - Anonymous
A broken bottle could indicate either aggression or failure.
Interpretation 18 — Internet Archive - Anonymous
If the Bottle is full, it shows prosperity; if it is empty, then misfortunes are foretold; while if you upset the contents, you may expect domestic worries.
Interpretation 19 — Joan Seaman - Tom Philbin
2. Emotional repression (as in “bottling up” feelings).
3. Prosperity (full bottle).
4. Misfortune (empty or broken bottle).
Interpretation 20 — Klaus Vollmar
Interpretation 21 — Raymond Buckland
To see an empty bottle symbolizes a need; a yearning.
Interpretation 22 — Versatile - Anonymous
Interpretation 23 — Katherine Taylor Craig
Interpretation 24 — Margaret Hamilton
Interpretation 25 — Vincent Wienand
2. Sustenance. Mark 2:22; Matt 9:17