barbecue |
kamado |
As nouns the difference between barbecue and kamado
is that
barbecue is a fireplace or pit for grilling food, typically used outdoors and traditionally employing hot charcoal as the heating medium while
kamado is a traditional japanese wood- or charcoal-fired earthen vessel used as a stove or oven.
As a verb barbecue
is to cook food on a barbecue; to smoke it over indirect heat from high-smoke fuels.
oven |
kamado |
As a proper noun oven
is fornax.
As a noun kamado is
a traditional japanese wood- or charcoal-fired earthen vessel used as a stove or oven.
cooker |
kamado |
As nouns the difference between cooker and kamado
is that
cooker is (chiefly|british) a device for heating food while
kamado is a traditional japanese wood- or charcoal-fired earthen vessel used as a stove or oven.
stove |
kamado |
As nouns the difference between stove and kamado
is that
stove is a heater, a closed apparatus to burn fuel for the warming of a room while
kamado is a traditional japanese wood- or charcoal-fired earthen vessel used as a stove or oven.
As a verb stove
is to heat or dry, as in a stove or
stove can be (
stave).
vessel |
kamado |
As nouns the difference between vessel and kamado
is that
vessel is (nautical) any craft designed for transportation on water, such as a ship or boat while
kamado is a traditional japanese wood- or charcoal-fired earthen vessel used as a stove or oven.
As a verb vessel
is (obsolete|transitive) to put into a vessel.
earthen |
kamado |
As an adjective earthen
is made of earth or mud.
As a noun kamado is
a traditional japanese wood- or charcoal-fired earthen vessel used as a stove or oven.
charcoal |
kamado |
As nouns the difference between charcoal and kamado
is that
charcoal is (uncountable) impure carbon obtained by destructive distillation of wood or other organic matter, that is to say, heating it in the absence of oxygen while
kamado is a traditional japanese wood- or charcoal-fired earthen vessel used as a stove or oven.
As an adjective charcoal
is of a dark gray colour.
As a verb charcoal
is to draw with charcoal.
wood |
kamado |
As a proper noun wood
is an english topographic surname for someone who lived in or near a wood.
As a noun kamado is
a traditional japanese wood- or charcoal-fired earthen vessel used as a stove or oven.
japanese |
kamado |
As nouns the difference between japanese and kamado
is that
japanese is a person living in or coming from japan, or of japanese ancestry while
kamado is a traditional japanese wood- or charcoal-fired earthen vessel used as a stove or oven.
As an adjective japanese
is of, relating to, or derived from japan, its language, or culture.
As a proper noun japanese
is the main language spoken in japan.
traditional |
kamado |
As an adjective traditional
is of or pertaining to tradition; derived from tradition; communicated from ancestors to descendants by word only; transmitted from age to age without writing; as, traditional opinions; traditional customs; traditional expositions of the Scriptures.
As a noun kamado is
a traditional Japanese wood- or charcoal-fired earthen vessel used as a stove or oven.