What is another word for earthenware?

Pronunciation: [ˈɜːθənwˌe͡ə] (IPA)

Earthenware is a versatile, inexpensive, and highly functional ceramic material used for making pottery, dishes, and other tableware. This type of pottery is typically unglazed, porous, and fired at lower temperatures than stoneware or porcelain. Some common synonyms for earthenware include terracotta, clay, ceramic, crockery, terra cotta, and pottery. Terracotta is a type of earthenware that is baked to a rustic brown color and often used for decorative items. Clay or ceramic can refer to any type of baked clay material, while crockery refers specifically to kitchen and dining ware made of earthenware. Terra cotta and pottery are general terms for any type of baked clay product.

What are the paraphrases for Earthenware?

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What are the hypernyms for Earthenware?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the hyponyms for Earthenware?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.
  • hyponyms for earthenware (as nouns)

Usage examples for Earthenware

Here are women bringing up great round earthenware vases on their heads and little round brass bowls in their hands, going and coming from a muddy pool in the centre of a waste of dried mud.
"From Edinburgh to India & Burmah"
William G. Burn Murdoch
He had charged an earthenware jar, as big as a bucket, with the gas and would probably have blown the wall out.
"The Debit Account"
Oliver Onions
Yes, the earthenware vessel was on the point of collision with the one of bronze, and which would break the months or the weeks or the days would show.
"The Story of Louie"
Oliver Onions

Famous quotes with Earthenware

  • It is a truism that when one is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. The glory of art is that it can show this proverbial hammer how everything looks to a screwdriver--and to a plowshare, and to an earthenware pot. If reality is the sum of our perceptions, to acquire more varying points of view is to acquire, literally, more reality.
    Matthew Stover
  • We had a large old-fashioned battery, a wet cell, in the kitchen, hooked up to an electric bell. The bell was too complicated to understand at first, and the battery, to my mind, was more immediately attractive, for it contained an earthenware tube with a massive, gleaming copper cylinder in the middle, immersed in a bluish liquid, all this inside an outer glass casing, also filled with fluid, and containing a slimmer bar of zinc. It looked like a miniature chemical factory of sorts, and I thought I saw little bubbles of gas, at times, coming off the zinc. The Daniell cell (as it was called) had a thoroughly nineteenth-century, Victorian look about it, and this extraordinary object was making electricity all by itself—not by rubbing or friction, but just by the virtue of its own chemical reactions.
    Oliver Sacks
  • The mountain reminds one of an upturned earthenware bowl, the glazing a little bluish at times, but sometimes like gold-rimmed transparent Chinese porcelain, especially if the sun is low in the west over the sea, because then the rays play on the glacier in two directions.
    Halldór Laxness

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