cauldron

[ UK /kˈɔːldɹən/ ]
[ US /ˈkɑɫdɹən, ˈkɔɫdɹən/ ]
NOUN
  1. a very large pot that is used for boiling
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How To Use cauldron In A Sentence

  • On top of that, they could have a taller Olympic cauldron. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was only when I was on the second sachet and gleefully exhorting the recalcitrant bubbling cauldron to cleanse thyself, that the Gamekeeper ran in gasping and flung all the windows open. 42 entries from November 2007
  • The woman was a seething cauldron of grievances against the man for whom she had sacrificed almost two decades of her life. Times, Sunday Times
  • I set and lit our fire, and filled our small cauldron with water.
  • There was a rocking chair that sat next to a fireplace, which held a medium sized cooking cauldron that was spilling ashes onto the burgundy hearthrug.
  • But the seething cauldron of resentment that has been uncovered. Times, Sunday Times
  • The crone’s cauldron is a deep part of the Halloween myth that represents the cosmic womb. The Crone and the Cauldron « bindu wiles
  • A vedro [2 3/4 gallons] and a half to the cauldron!" whispered the ex-soldier with a computative grunt as he gained his feet. Through Russia
  • Are we going to be living in some small, dinky shack with no running water and a cast iron cauldron for cooking?
  • The information on 'poetry' I have to advertize, is a bardic prose-poem attributed to Amergin and translated into English first, 1300 years after its composition by an anonymous bard, without title: 'the cauldron of poetry', so called because of the metaphorical conceit in the piece, of poetry being created in a person's three internal cauldrons: Warming, Motion & Wisdom. Poetry: a beautiful renaissance
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