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Urn vs Pitcher - What's the difference?

urn | pitcher |

As nouns the difference between urn and pitcher

is that urn is (internet) uniform resource name while pitcher is one who pitches anything, as hay, quoits, a ball, etc or pitcher can be a wide-mouthed, deep vessel for holding liquids, with a spout or protruding lip and a handle; a water jug or jar with a large ear or handle.

urn

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • a vase with a footed base
  • * Bishop Wilkins
  • A rustic, digging in the ground by Padua, found an urn , or earthen pot, in which there was another urn.
  • * Dryden
  • His scattered limbs with my dead body burn, / And once more join us in the pious urn .
  • * {{quote-book
  • , year = 1967 , first = Barbara , last = Sleigh , authorlink = Barbara Sleigh , title = (Jessamy) , edition = 1993 , location = Sevenoaks, Kent , publisher=Bloomsbury , isbn = 0 340 19547 9 , page = 47 , url = , passage = ‘You would take her side Marcus! You don’t know what it’s like at school. Mary Fibbs and all her friends start making coughing noises whenever I come near them, and then they all giggle and Mary says Grandfather mixes his cough medicine in the urns on top of the gate posts after dark with his umbrella, and now Jessamy! I only wish Harry was here. You’re all against me. I hate you all. I hate you!’ }}
  • a metal vessel for serving tea or coffee
  • a vessel for ashes or cremains of a deceased person
  • (figurative) Any place of burial; the grave.
  • * Shakespeare
  • Or lay these bones in an unworthy urn , / Tombless, with no remembrance over them.
  • (historical, Roman antiquity) A measure of capacity for liquids, containing about three gallons and a half, wine measure. It was half the amphora, and four times the congius.
  • (botany) A hollow body shaped like an urn, in which the spores of mosses are contained; a spore case; a theca.
  • Anagrams

    * run

    pitcher

    English

    (Webster 1913)

    Etymology 1

    (wikipedia pitcher) (to throw, etc. ) + -er

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • One who pitches anything, as hay, quoits, a ball, etc.
  • (baseball, softball), the player who delivers the ball to the batter.
  • (chiefly, US, colloquial) The top partner in a homosexual relationship or penetrator in a sexual encounter between two men.
  • (obsolete) A sort of crowbar for digging.
  • Etymology 2

    From (etyl) picher, from (etyl) pichier, . More at (l).

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A wide-mouthed, deep vessel for holding liquids, with a spout or protruding lip and a handle; a water jug or jar with a large ear or handle.
  • (botany) A tubular or cuplike appendage or expansion of the leaves of certain plants. See .
  • Derived terms
    * little pitchers have big ears

    Anagrams

    * ----