Cauldron vs Stewpot - What's the difference?
cauldron | stewpot |
A large bowl-shaped pot used for boiling over an open flame.
* 1623 , William Shakespeare,
* 1997 , J. K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone , Raincoast Books, ISBN 9781551923963, page 102:
* 2004 , Carl Neal, The Magick Toolbox: The Ultimate Compendium for Choosing and Using Ritual Implements and Magickal Tools , Red Wheel/Weiser, LLC (2004), ISBN 9781578633241,
*
A pot used for making stew, usually large and heavy
* {{quote-news, year=2009, date=February 4, author=Melissa Clark, title=Braised Rabbit, Easier on the Fat, work=New York Times
, passage=What my parents served me from that very same stewpot was chicken. }}
(arts, literature) A jumble, especially one that lacks intellectual coherence
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=February 6, author=Michiko Kakutani, title=Dispatch From Gomorrah, Savaging the Cultural Left, work=New York Times
, passage=It’s a nasty stewpot of intellectually untenable premises and irresponsible speculation that frequently reads like a “Saturday Night Live” parody of the crackpot right. }}
As nouns the difference between cauldron and stewpot
is that cauldron is a large bowl-shaped pot used for boiling over an open flame while stewpot is a pot used for making stew, usually large and heavy.cauldron
English
Alternative forms
* caldronNoun
(en noun)Macbeth, Act IV, Scene I:
- Double, double toil and trouble;
- Fire burn, and cauldron bubble.
unnumbered page:
- Large cauldrons are a little tricky to locate, but are well worth the search if you have a place to safely store and use one.
Synonyms
* (l)stewpot
English
Noun
(en noun)citation
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