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单词 porcelain
释义

porcelainn.adj.

Brit. /ˈpɔːsl̩ᵻn/, /ˈpɔːs(ə)lᵻn/, /ˈpɔːsl̩eɪn/, /ˈpɔːs(ə)leɪn/, U.S. /ˈpɔrs(ə)lən/
Forms:

α. 1500s parsellina, 1500s porcelana, 1500s porcelayne, 1500s porceleyne, 1500s porcelyne, 1500s porseland (perhaps transmission error), 1500s porslin, 1500s porssin, 1500s–1600s porcellan, 1500s–1600s porcellana, 1500s–1700s porcellane, 1500s–1800s porcelaine, 1600s parcallen, 1600s porcelen, 1600s porc'lane, 1600s porseline, 1600s–1700s porcelline, 1600s–1800s porcelane, 1600s– porcelain, 1700s porcelin, 1700s porc'lain.

β. 1500s purselyn, 1500s–1600s purcelan, 1500s–1600s purcelane, 1500s–1600s purslane, 1500s–1700s purslaine, 1600s pourcelain, 1600s purcelaine, 1600s purceline, 1600s purcellan, 1600s purcellein, 1600s purselain, 1600s purselan, 1600s purselane, 1600s purslan, 1600s pursland, 1600s purslin, 1600s pusillane, 1600s–1700s purcelain; Scottish pre-1700 purselein, pre-1700 purslen, pre-1700 purslin, pre-1700 purstlen, 1700s purcelain.

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymons: French porcelaine, pourcelaine, porceline.
Etymology: < Middle French, French porcelaine, †pourcelaine, †porceline a kind of univalve mollusc with a nacreous shell, the shell itself, (now spec.) a cowrie (1298 in Marco Polo), chinaware (also 1298 in Marco Polo), a vessel made of china (c1600), beads or shells used as currency, wampum (1620 or earlier as pourceline in the source translated in quot. 1882 at sense A. 4), apparently < Italian porcellana , denoting both the mollusc and the ceramic material (although this is apparently first attested later (14th cent. in both senses in the Italian version of Marco Polo)), probably < porcella female piglet, a young sow (a1400; see below) + -ana , feminine of -ano -an suffix, perhaps after ancient Greek χοιρίνη small sea-mussel < χοῖρος pig, also female genitals (see cherogril n.) + -ίνη (see -ine suffix3). Italian porcella is < porca sow (a1342), feminine of porco pork n.1 + -ella -ella suffix; compare porca, porcella cockle or mussel shell in which painters put their colours (1611 in apparently isolated use), porcelletta shellfish (a1488), and also porcello (male) piglet, pig (1272). Compare ( < Italian) post-classical Latin porcellana (a1540; 1622, 1626 in British sources; a1250 in a British source denoting a cowrie shell), Spanish porcelana (1495 or earlier), Catalan porcellana (14th cent.), Portuguese porcelana (15th cent. as porçelana, porçellãa), German Porzellan (1477 as porzelane in a translation of Marco Polo); also Dutch porselein (1596; < French), Swedish porslin (1640 as perselin in Perselin-faat), Danish porcelæn.The ceramic material was apparently so named on account of the resemblance of its translucent surface to the nacreous shell of the mollusc. From at least the mid 16th cent. a popular explanation was current (cited e.g. 1557 in Scaliger ) according to which there was a glaze on chinaware that was actually made from these shells, but it is uncertain whether this dates back to the original naming of the ceramic material or whether it shows a later rationalization. (The actual details of the process of making true porcelain were not known in Europe before the 18th cent.: see china n.2 1 and compare sense A. 1b.) The cowrie was probably originally so named on account of the resemblance of the fissure of its shell to a vulva (it is unclear whether the reference is spec. to the vulva of a sow). Compare classical Latin porcus female genitals (see portulaca n.) and perhaps compare also Italian porcile di Venere female genitals (1598 in an apparently isolated attestation in this sense). For instances of an apparently similar motivation for naming such molluscs, compare Venus-shell n. at Venus n.1 Compounds 2c, Cypraea n. However, other explanations (that also assume the ultimate derivation of porcellana cowrie < porco pig) have been offered. The word was apparently associated already in Italian and French with the name for plants of the genus Portulaca, which was homonymous with it (see purslane n.), and the two words probably continued to influence each other in English up to the 17th or 18th cent. (compare β forms and compare the β forms at purslane n.). However, it is uncertain whether these two words are ultimately related (see portulaca n.). (Derivation from Italian porcellana purslane (see purslane n.) has, however, been suggested as an alternative etymology of the present word.) With sense B. 1b compare earlier to point Percy at the porcelain at Percy n. 3. With porcelain blue adj. and n. at Compounds 1a compare china blue adj. and n.
A. n.
1.
a. An impermeable translucent ceramic material made from china clay or kaolin, used originally for making vessels and later also for industrial objects, in dentistry, etc. Sometimes more generally: china, esp. when of fine quality. Also: chinaware made of such material. Cf. bone china n. and adj. at bone n.1 Compounds 6.Sometimes with distinguishing word, as hard, natural, soft porcelain, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > perching birds > order Columbiformes (pigeons, etc.) > domestic pigeon > [noun] > other types
porcelainc1530
turn-pate1611
light horseman1661
runt1661
smiter1668
helmet1676
mammet1678
Cortbeck1688
turbit1688
turner1688
dragoon1725
finicking1725
Leghorn1725
nun1725
owl1725
petit1725
trumpeter1725
horseman1735
Mahomet1735
barbel1736
turn-tail1736
frill-back1765
blue rock1825
beard1826
ice pigeon1829
toy1831
black1839
skinnum1839
splash1851
whole-feather1851
spangle1854
swallow1854
shield1855
stork pigeon1855
Swabian1855
yellow1855
archangel1867
dragon1867
starling1867
magpie1868
smerle1869
bluette1870
cumulet1876
oriental1876
spot fairy1876
turbiteen1876
blondinette1879
hyacinth1879
Modena pigeon1879
silver-dun1879
silverette1879
silver-mealy1879
swift pigeon1879
Victoria1879
visor1879
ice1881
swallow pigeon1881
velvet fairy1881
priesta1889
frill1890
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > clay compositions > baked clay > pottery or ceramics > [noun] > porcelain
porcelainc1530
China-metal1599
the world > health and disease > healing > dentistry > [noun] > materials
porcelain1845
investment1860
stopping1863
pack1923
α.
c1530 in H. Ellis Orig. Lett. Eng. Hist. (1846) 3rd Ser. II. 242 iij. potts of Erthe payntid, callyd Porseland [? Porselana].
1555 R. Eden Disc. Vyage rounde Worlde in tr. Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde f. 226 He had two vesselles made of the fine earth cauled Porcellana.
1582 N. Lichefield tr. F. L. de Castanheda 1st Bk. Hist. Discouerie E. Indias i. xlix. 106 Sixe great Tynages of fine Earth, which they doe call Porcelanas, and the same is verye costlye.
1596 J. Harington Apol. sig. Bbvj Serued in as fine plate, and Porslin, as any is in the North.
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage 524 They vse much the powder of a certaine herb called Chia, of which they put as much as a Walnut-shell may containe, into a dish of Porcelane, and drinke it with hot water.
a1684 J. Evelyn Diary anno 1650 (1955) III. 3 Of Earth painted like Porcelain or China ware.
1727 A. Hamilton New Acct. E. Indies II. li. 239 We have the same Sort of Clay in several Parts of Great Britain, that Porcelline is made of, but we want the warm Sun to prepare it.
1756 T. Nugent Grand Tour II. 260 Porcelane or Dresden china.
1825 J. Bentham Rationale Reward 303 The potteries of Wedgwood and Bentley have excelled the porcelain of China.
1845 C. A. Harris Princ. & Pract. Dental Surg. (ed. 2) vi. i. 541 A want of resemblance to the other teeth, in colour, transparency, and animation, was the great objection, that was urged against the porcelain.
1869 H. E. Roscoe Lessons Elem. Chem. (new ed.) xxiii. 269 It is employed as a green colour for painting on porcelain.
1907 N.E.D. (at cited word) The name properly belongs to the hard paste or natural porcelain, composed of Kaolin combined in China with Petuntse, elsewhere with some siliceous material; but it is also applied to soft paste or artificial porcelain, which is essentially a substance intermediate between glass and earthenware, and hybrid or mixed porcelain, which contains a certain amount of kaolin.
1940 B. Leach Potter's Bk. ii. 35 Porcelain differs from stoneware in that its white body becomes translucent when vitrified.
1965 Brit. Dental Jrnl. 119 251/1 One of the main criticisms levelled at dental porcelain is the liability to fracture under low impact stress.
1996 Woman's Day (Sydney) 3 June 82 (advt.) Head, arms and legs handcrafted of fine bisque porcelain.
β. 1585 T. Washington tr. N. de Nicolay Nauigations Turkie iii. x. 90 The meat..they lay into platters of purcelan.1653 J. Hall Paradoxes 95 Purselain and Venice Glasses are the most apt to be broke.c1660 J. Evelyn Diary anno 1644 (1955) II. 100 Curiosities naturall or artificial.., Indian or Europan, for luxury or Use, as Cabinets, Shells, Ivorys, Purselan, Dried fishes, rare Insects.1682 Weekly Memorials for Ingenious (Faithorne & Kersey) 1 May 95 As for the Pourcelain, 'tis not made of Plaster or Egg shells beaten small, but of a certain Earth.1690 in A. Earle Colonial Days in Old N.Y. 104 Holland cupboard furnished with earthenware and purslin.1703 London Gaz. No. 3953/1 A Manufacture of Lame, Purslaine and Earthen Ware.1733 P. Lindsay Interest Scotl. ii. 64 The Purcelain of China and Japan, and the curious Workmanship brought from thence.
b. A supposed natural plaster or paste from which porcelain was believed to form spontaneously by congealing. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > clay > [noun] > for making pottery > types of > supposed
porcelain1599
porcelain earth1600
1599 R. Hakluyt tr. E. de Sande in Princ. Navigations (new ed.) II. ii. 91 That earthen or pliable matter commonly called porcellan, which is pure white,..wherof vessels of all kinds are very curiously framed.
1615 F. Bacon Case Impeachm. Waste in Wks. (1859) VII. 528 If we had in England beds of porcelain, such as they have in China,—which porcelain is a kind of a plaster buried in the earth and by length of time congealed and glazed into that fine substance.
1658 E. Phillips New World Eng. Words Porcelane,..also the cream, or flowring on the top of a certain chalky earth, in China steeped in water, of which they make China dishes.
c. figurative. With reference to the fineness, fragility, etc., associated with porcelain (sense A. 1a).
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > constitution of matter > weakness > [noun] > brittleness or fragility > fragile thing or person
wafer-cake1600
porcelain1640
the mind > attention and judgement > beauty > pleasing appearance > [noun] > delicateness or daintiness > delicate or dainty thing
porcelain1640
1640 R. Brome Sparagus Garden v. viii She is herself the purest piece of Purslane..that e're had liquid sweet meats lick'd out of it.
1773 J. Robertson Poems (rev. ed.) 92 Woman has ever been defin'd The Porcelain Clay of Human Kind, And in that Porcelain, 'tis suppos'd, A Soul superior is inclos'd.
1821 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto IV xi. 76 Thrice fortunate! who of that fragile mould, The precious porcelain of human clay, Break with the first fall.
1931 W. Faulkner Sanctuary xviii. 190 She grinned at him, her mouth warped over the rigid, placative porcelain of her grimace.
2003 N.Y. Observer (Nexis) 29 Sept. 25 ‘Lord Anthony’..is pure porcelain, a gorgeous, velvety song lifted softly by strings.
2. An article or vessel made of porcelain; a piece of porcelain or chinaware. Usually in plural. Now chiefly in specialist contexts.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > clay compositions > baked clay > pottery or ceramics > [noun] > porcelain > a piece of porcelain
porcelain?a1549
fictility1892
α.
1579 J. Frampton tr. B. de Escalante Disc. Nauigation ix. f. 24v They sel the Porcelanas which is the fine dishes made of whyte clay at the gates of the Citie.
1598 W. Phillip tr. J. H. van Linschoten Disc. Voy. E. & W. Indies i. xxiii. 38/2 The Cups and earthen Pots..are called Porceleynes, whereof also the Earth hath her name.
1660 B. Gerbier Sommary Descr. Profits Coast Amer. sig. B2 Not expect trimmings in prancking houses, with a fect of Porcelyns.
1714 J. Macky Journey through Eng. I. iii. 34 In another Gallery..[is] a good Collection of Porcelaines, and other Curiosities.
1787 Hist. & Polit. Remarks Tariff of Commerc. Treaty 156 The unnecessary Porcelains of Worcester, or the ornamental Toys of Sheffield, Salisbury, and Birmingham.
1886 Pall Mall Gaz. 19 Aug. 14/1 Windsor is full of these precious porcelains, and they adorn all her residences.
1906 S. W. Bushell Chinese Art II. viii. 24 The Ting-chou and Tz'ŭ-chou porcelains.
1939 Parnassus Dec. 29/1 The number of porcelains provided with XVIIIth Century French ormolu mounts.
1975 New Yorker 19 May 76/1 (advt.) Six extraordinary limited-edition porcelains.
1994 J. E. Conklin Art Crime iv. 131 [He] confessed to stealing eighty-one Asian porcelains, snuff boxes, and other pieces from the museum.
β. ?a1549 Inventory Henry VIII (1998) I. 14/1 A crosse of Jasper..standing vppon a foote of syluer and gilte..worke..the borders enameled and sett aboute with viij plates of purselyns or counterfett Camews.1604 E. Grimeston tr. J. de Acosta Nat. & Morall Hist. Indies iv. xvii. 259 They seethe it in purcelaines [Sp. en unas porcelanas].1660 F. Brooke tr. V. Le Blanc World Surveyed 47 Silks, purslanes, sendals,..come from China.
3. = porcelain shell n. at Compounds 2. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > class Gastropoda > [noun] > superorder Branchifera > order Prosobranchiata > section Siphonostomata > family Cypraeidae > member of
porcelain1601
porcelain shell1601
tiger-shell1753
cowrie1777
tiger-cowrie1839
1601 R. Johnson tr. G. Botero Trauellers Breuiat 104 In the kingdomes of Caiacan and Carazan, certaine sea shels are currant, which some men terme Porcelline.
1763 R. Brookes New Syst. Nat. Hist. III. xxxvii. 311 The porcelain is a simple shell, consisting of one piece.
1797 Encycl. Brit. V. 129/1 In many places shells are current for coins; particularly a small white kind..called in the Indies cowries, or coris, on the coast of Africa bouges, in America porcelaines.
1848 S. V. Wood Monogr. Crag Mollusca I. 15 ‘Pig’ is the common name of these shells upon the coast. In Italy they are called Porcelli; and Porcelain, the common name of cowries, is taken from the fancied resemblance of these shells to pigs.
1868 tr. L. Figuier Ocean World xiv. 419 Porcelains are found at a little distance from the shore, generally in the clefts of the rocky bottoms; but sometimes they bury themselves in the sand.
1875 W. S. Jevons Money iv. 24 Cowry shells, which, under one name or another—chamgos, zimbis, bouges, porcelanes, &c.—have long been used.
1986 J. Hogendorn & M. Johnson Shell Money of Slave Trade (2003) i. 15 They [sc. cowries] were still known as ‘porcelains’ in eighteenth-century Marseilles.
4. Beads or strings of beads made from shells, glass, china, etc., as used by North American Indians (and also by European settlers) as currency or decoration. Also: the shells or parts of shells used as such. Cf. wampum n. 1a, wampum bead at Compounds 1. Now rare (historical in later use).Frequently translating French porcelaine in this sense.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > money > medium of exchange or currency > other mediums of exchange > [noun] > shells
shell1600
cowrie1662
porcelainc1665
cowrie shell1817
bouge1875
c1665 P. E. Radisson Voy. (1885) 49 We mett severall gangs of men to our greatest disadvantage, ffor we weare forced to sing, and those that came to see us gave porcelaine to those that most did us injury.
1709 J. Lawson New Voy. Carolina 191 The Hair of their Heads is made into a long Roll like a Horses Tail, and bound round with Ronoak or Porcelain, which is a sort of Beads they make of Conk-Shells.
1760 T. Jefferys Nat. & Civil Hist. French Dominions N. & S. Amer. I. 51 She is first to present him with a collar of porcelain, or sea-shells.
1882 C. P. Otis tr. S. de Champlain Voy. III. vii. 150 The Algonquins, who for securing peace had given the Atignouaatians fifty necklaces of porcelain and some branches of the same.
1899 tr. in Jesuit Relations & Allied Documents LII. cxxv. ix. 257 She left..the most beautiful collar she had. It was composed of six thousand beads of almost wholly black porcelain, which is precious among the Savages.
1956 Ethnohistory 3 21 The tubular beads which were designated wampum, seawan or porcelain..in the..colonies of the eastern coast of North America, were known to and in use by most tribes of the area before contact.
5. In form Porcelain. A variety of domestic pigeon having dark brown and cream plumage.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > perching birds > order Columbiformes (pigeons, etc.) > [noun] > family Columbidae > miscellaneous types of
nutmeg pigeon1783
blue pigeon1790
Namaqua dove1801
mountain witch1823
partridge pigeon1823
imperial pigeon1830
toy1831
porcelain1855
toothbill1862
fruit-pigeon1865
orange dove1875
tambourine pigeon1891
topknot pigeon1891
cinnamon dove1895
partridge1936
1855 Poultry Chron. 3 9/1 Those pretty spangled Toys..known by various names, as Porcelains, Hyacinths, Ermines, &c.
1876 in R. Fulton Illustr. Bk. Pigeons xxv. 348 Porcelains..are closely allied to Suabians... These birds are of a nice rich brown.., the under parts being of an ashen tint.
1914 W. A. Lippincott Poultry Production ii. 79 Pigeons... Those in which color markings alone are distinguishing characteristics..include..Porcelains, [etc.].
1945 W. M. Levi Pigeon 60/1 English literature describes the Hyacinth, the Victoria,..and the Porcelain, treating them as consanguineous varieties.
B. adj.
1.
a. Of porcelain; made of porcelain or china. Also: (of a bath, washbasin, etc.) coated in porcelain enamel.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > clay compositions > baked clay > pottery or ceramics > [adjective] > porcelain
porcelain1598
wally1904
1598 J. Florio Worlde of Wordes Porcellan dishes.
1631 B. Jonson Staple of Newes ii. iv. 150 in Wks. II In porc'lane dishes There were some hope.
1682 G. Wheler Journey into Greece iii. 216 The Walls cased with Porcelane Tiles.
1759 S. Johnson Prince of Abissinia I. iv. 29 A maid, who had broken a porcelain cup.
1783 J. Wedgwood in Philos. Trans. 1782 (Royal Soc.) 72 317 By a very strong fire, they are changed to a porcelain or semi-vitreous texture.
1800 tr. E. J. B. Bouillon-Lagrange Man. Course Chem. II. 312 Bring the porcelain tube to a red heat.
1865 Times 10 Feb. 14/2 (advt.) One [room] fitted in a superior manner with porcelain bath and washstand.
1877 W. Jones Finger-ring Lore 8 The porcelain finger-rings of ancient Egypt are extremely beautiful.
1907 G. M. Norman Systematic Pract. Org. Chem. i. i. 1 A small quantity of white anhydrous copper sulphate (obtained by heating the powdered salt in a porcelain dish over a small flame until quite white).
1976 Eastern Daily Press (Norwich) 19 Nov. 22/5 A smaller six-inch stuffed doll with porcelain head realised £92.
1994 Calgary (Alberta) Herald (Nexis) 16 Feb. d4 A white porcelain oven with pink painted roses is full of cracks.
2001 Art Room Catal. Autumn 64/1 The ‘blue fruit’ is a copy of a Derby porcelain plate dating from 1825.
b. humorous slang (originally U.S.). Designating a lavatory; esp. in phrases referring to urination or the posture adopted by a person vomiting, as to point Percy at the porcelain at Percy n. 3; to drive the porcelain bus, to pray to the porcelain goddess, etc. Cf. big white telephone n. at white adj. and n. Phrases 12.
ΚΠ
1978 Elyria (Ohio) Chron.-Telegram 31 Dec. c1 One whiff of dorm food sent me flying to the porcelain goddess once again.
1980 L. Birnbach et al. Official Preppy Handbk. 113/2 Be able to announce to your friends that you capped a romantic evening by vomiting. Using the accepted jargon. Which is extensive... Drive the porcelain bus... Kiss the porcelain god.
1988 Independent 24 Dec. (Mag.) 10/3 To be sick..is ‘praying to the porcelain goddess’.
1997 Washington Times (Nexis) 31 Mar. c5 The women custodians do it..with toiletries, potpourri, plants and pictures..which hang in the stalls behind several of the porcelain gods.
2005 Sunday Mail (S. Austral.) (Nexis) 14 Aug. (Suppl.) i.9 John spikes the drink of Claire's arrogant nightmare of a boyfriend, Sack... While Sack spends the night driving the porcelain bus, John [etc.].
2. figurative. Resembling porcelain in some respect; fragile, delicate, fine.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > good taste > refinement > fastidiousness > [adjective] > over-refined
minikin1545
porcelaina1643
a1643 W. Cartwright In Mem. Beniamin Iohnson in Jonsonus Virbius sig. F4 Though those thy thoughts, which the now queasie age, Doth count but Clods,..Will come up Porcelane wit some hundreds hence.
1870 H. Smart Race for Wife i. 3 The dispensary ball, at which the porcelain portion of the community danced.
1884 A. Birrell Obiter Dicta 183 China creeds and delicate porcelain opinions.
1936 M. Allingham Flowers for Judge viii. 132 An almost porcelain hardness in her face.
1979 D. Eden Storrington Papers xv. 170 His tumbled curls and his porcelain skin.
1991 BOMB Summer 63 One of those exceptional actresses who combine formidable inner strength with an almost porcelain fragility.

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive.
porcelain blue adj. and n.
ΚΠ
1703 tr. H. van Oosten Dutch Gardener ii. xxxviii. 91 The Hyacinth that is handsom, must have a clear Porcelin, or China Blew, or near white Colour.
1882 Garden 4 Nov. 396/1 Pretty porcelain-blue blossoms.
1979 Dryad Catal. 30/1 Dewhurst Sylko Perle..Jasmine..Porcelain Blue..Purple.
2004 Calgary (Alberta) Herald (Nexis) 27 Mar. e3 Waltzing couples, the women in shades of porcelain blue, lemon yellow, pink and gold.
porcelain grain n. now rare
ΚΠ
1794 R. Kirwan Elements Mineral. (ed. 2) I. 2nd App. 436 All fused earthy substances present either a porcelain grain, always glazed if the fusion extended to even one half of the whole, or conchoidal and glazed if it extended farther.
1811 J. Pinkerton Petralogy II. xii. vii. 286 In this heat, many stones of the argillaceous genus..alter their colour, become porous, assume a porcelain grain, and consequently begin to vitrify.
1878 T. Kentish Pyrotechnist's Treas. 188 (table) Charcoal. Coke grains. Porcelain grains.
1992 Extraction (Part ii) in alt.drugs (Usenet newsgroup) 25 Feb. Also useful: acid/base indicator paper, boiling chips (porcelain grains) and activated charcoal.
2009 S. Newcomb World in Crucible x. 142/1 Kirwan found most stones called ‘basalt’ lacked what he considered marks of fusion, the porcelain grain and glazing, and some air bubbles.
porcelain ware n.
ΚΠ
1638 T. Herbert Some Yeares Trav. (rev. ed.) 37 The Bannians..sell Callicoes, Chena-satten, Purcellan ware.
1727 J. G. Scheuchzer tr. E. Kæmpfer Hist. Japan II. App. 61 In Fisen they have a certain white clay, of which they make all sorts of Porcellane-ware.
1882 China Rev. 10 No. 5. 310/1 Speaking of porcelain ware.., it is absolutely necessary to distinguish the kinds called Chʽái porcelain.., Ü porcelain.., Government porcelain.., Ko porcelain.
1995 M. Lewis Singapore: Rough Guide 100/2 Two excellent craft shops..both specializing in ceramic elephants, dragon pots, porcelain ware, rattan and bamboo products.
b. Objective, parasynthetic, etc.
(a)
porcelain maker n.
ΚΠ
1801 Monthly Mag. 12 579 The porcelain-makers of Paris..saunter in ungaining idleness.
1994 Antique Dealer & Collectors Guide Nov. 39/2 The willingness of the Russian porcelain makers to copy established foreign styles.
porcelain making n.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > clay compositions > baked clay > pottery or ceramics > [noun] > porcelain > English porcelain
Worcester1802
Plymouth1816
New Hall1829
Broseley porcelain1845
Colebrook Dale1855
Crown Derby1855
Caughley porcelain1868
Derby1868
Plymouth1869
Lowestoft1875
Longton1885
frit-porcelain1889
Coalport1899
porcelain making1903
Goss1906
Longton Hall1925
Pinxton1928
1770 D. Pincot Ess. Origin, Nature, Uses, & Properties, Artific. Stone iii. 68 A brilliant colour in the finer branches of porcelain-making is reckoned one principal requisite.
1903 Daily Chron. 7 Jan. 3/2 An art, so many-sided in its efforts,..as English porcelain-making.
2004 Pittsburgh (Pa.) Post-Gaz. (Nexis) 25 Apr. n1 Her 300 pieces trace the 300-year history of porcelain making in Europe that began in 1709.
(b)
porcelain-tinted adj.
ΚΠ
1881 Scribner's Monthly 21 76/1 A blonde beauty, of the delicate, porcelain-tinted type.
1994 B. Antoni Paradise Overdose (1997) 72 She stretches out her arms, long and porcelain tinted.
porcelain-white adj.
ΚΠ
1848 Gaz. Union & Golden Rule 9 Sept. 184/2 Thin, wiry, rat-gnawed beards,..and ever and anon with porcelain-white, dead whiting, staring, but cunning eyes.
1899 Daily News 29 June 6/7 A cameo..wrought in a beautiful porcelain-white upper stratum of a sardonyx.
1995 Country Living May 143 (heading) Made from the milk of water buffalo, porcelain-white mozzarella di bufala has been enjoyed in southern Italy for centuries.
C2.
porcelain cement n. a kind of cement for mending china, glass, etc.
ΚΠ
1832 Times 8 Feb. 3/3 I was to supervise the porcelain cement, the road making, and keeping the books.
1889 Dental Advertiser 20 25 (advt.) The Porcelain Cement No. 2 is highly recommended for cementing crowns and bridge work to place.
2003 Florida Today (Nexis) 9 Sept. 4 Another reader said he recommends white porcelain cement.
porcelain colour n. paint used for painting on porcelain.
ΚΠ
1853 A. Ure Dict. Arts (ed. 4) II. 913 In purifying the cobalt for porcelain colours, the removal of the whole of the arsenic is of less consequence than that of the iron.
1999 Appliance (Nexis) 1 Nov. 43 In wet enamel, porcelain color stability seems to be better over a range of firing temperatures.
porcelain crab n. [probably after French Porcellane (1809 or earlier) or its etymon scientific Latin Porcellana (see porcellanian n. and adj.); compare earlier porcellanian n.] a crab of the genus Porcellana or the family Porcellanidae, having a smooth carapace and commonly found beneath stones in shallow water along rocky coasts.
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the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Crustacea > [noun] > subclass Malacostraca > division Thoracostraca > order Decapoda > suborder Brachyura (crab) > miscellaneous or unspecified types of crab
sea lion1601
blue crab1763
violet crab1774
angular crab1777
red crab1825
softshell1830
turtle-crab1838
porcellanian1840
Thelphusian1842
lady crab1844
oxystome1852
lobster-crab1854
porcelain crab1854
ochidore1855
havil1857
mask crab1857
sepoy crab1857
violet land crab1864
frog crab1876
stool-crab1880
paper-shell1890
porter crab1904
mitten crab1934
1854 Househ. Words 15 July 508/2 A Porcelain crab, or Hairy Broadclaw..is a crab with..fringed swimming plates..large foot-jaws, and antennae longer than the body.
1949 C. M. Yonge Sea Shore xi. 155 Under stones where there is mud lives the hairy porcelain crab, Porcellana platycheles... A smaller species, P. longicornis, the minute porcelain crab, lives..always clear of mud.
2003 Dallas Morning News (Nexis) 7 July 3 e Two species of porcelain crab are native to the cold waters of the northeastern Pacific Ocean.
porcelain earth n. porcelain clay, kaolin.
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society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > clay > [noun] > for making pottery > types of > supposed
porcelain1599
porcelain earth1600
1600 J. Pory tr. J. Leo Africanus Geogr. Hist. Afr. iii. 209 They haue such abundance of porcellan earth.
1767 W. Harte Macarius in Amaranth 217 True Fame, like porc'lain earth, for years must lay Bury'd, and mix'd with elemental clay.
1849 H. D. Thoreau Week Concord & Merrimack Rivers 155 It comes to us as refined as the porcelain earth which subsides to the bottom of the ocean.
1922 Burlington Mag. Sept. 151/1 In the local porcelain earth the Ting Chou potter had at hand the material which answered all his requirements.
1985 Arkansas Democrat-Gaz. (Nexis) 6 Mar. Ireland has had a long ceramic history, primarily because of the island's abundance of porcelain earth and potter's clay.
porcelain jasper n. [after German Porzellanjaspis (attributed to A. G. Werner by C. A. S. Hoffmann 1789, in Bergmännisches Jrnl. 1 375)] Geology a hardened clay or shale resulting from thermal metamorphism (originally regarded as a variety of jasper); cf. porcellanite n. 1.
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the world > the earth > structure of the earth > constituent materials > clay > [noun] > other clays
red clayc1475
urry1669
blae1724
cat-dirt1747
iron clay1750
till1762
mulatto clay1788
oak-tree clay1794
porcelain jasper1794
porcellanite1794
Karoo ground1836
plinthite1836
papa1851
Bradford clay1858
Indianaite1868
sinopite1868
hydrobiotite1881
pampas-clay1885
byon1892
potato clay1896
bentonite1898
quick clay1901
gumbotil1916
1794 R. Kirwan Elements Mineral. (ed. 2) I. 313 Porcellanite, Porcelain Jasper, of Werner.
1888 N. Amer. Rev. July 47 It occurs in a ferruginous porcelain jasper, in veins from half an inch to four inches in thickness.
1938 F. D. Adams Birth & Devel. Geol. Sci. (1954) vii. 225 The porcelain-jasper often displayed the impressions of plants, owing..to the fact that it was really a shale indurated and altered by the action of heat.
2003 D. A. Young Mind over Magma ii. 27 Werner also discussed pseudo-volcanic rocks such as earth slag, porcelain jasper, and half burned clays.
porcelain kiln n. a kiln in which porcelain is fired.
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society > occupation and work > equipment > furnace or kiln > kiln > [noun] > pottery kilns
pot-oven1702
biscuit oven1768
gloss-oven1825
glaze-kiln1839
porcelain kiln1848
grand feu1850
smother-kiln1851
bisque1853
muffle kiln1853
muffle1875
1848 Sci. Amer. 29 Apr. 251/2 It becomes very white in the porcelain kiln, and is tolerably well adapted to the manufacture of Liverpool or delf ware.
1893 E. A. Barber Pottery & Porcelain U.S. 258 It is fired in biscuit at a low temperature, in the second story of the porcelain-kiln.
2002 Orlando (Florida) Sentinel (Nexis) 17 Nov. k7 Porcelain is fired in a porcelain kiln at a higher temperature than ceramic.
porcelain lace n. porcelain in thin filaments made by soaking lace in the porcelain slip and then burning the threads and leaving the porcelain, used in the decorative work of Berlin porcelain.
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1892 Cosmopolitan June 182/2 A bewitching figure..completely covered with delicate porcelain lace and flowers from her beautiful shoulders to the tips of her tiny feet.
1964 R. L. Charles Continental Porcelain in 18th C. iii. 27 Porcelain lace (a degenerate form of decoration) was made by the use of real lace dipped into liquid porcelain clay, or slip. The real lace disappeared in the firing.
2001 Birmingham (Alabama) News (Nexis) 26 Sept. Connie Chancellor..shared with onlookers how the porcelain lace was made out of regular lace covered in porcelain that had been fired.
porcelain oven n. (a) = porcelain kiln n.; (b) an oven in which metal is coated with porcelain enamel.
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1848 Sci. Amer. 22 July 352/1 M. Edeleman produced in this way by evaporating and heating a solution of magnesia and alumina in boracic acid in a porcelain oven, several minerals.
1890 Newark (Ohio) Daily Advocate 26 Mar. Oxide of chromium is also a beautiful green color, which is, however, destructible under the heat of a porcelain oven.
1902 Nebraska State Jrnl. 7 May 8/2 Dr. A. O. Hunt, dean of the Omaha dental college..will speak in clinics on ‘Porcelain Specialties’. A new porcelain oven will be demonstrated.
1981 Forbes (Nexis) 19 Jan. 57 Entering the fireplace market posed little risk. ‘We already had the porcelain ovens and the metal-shaping facilities, so it wouldn't cost us much,’ says Thomas.
porcelain paper n. a type of usually thick, glazed paper.
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society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > material for making paper > paper > [noun] > coated papers
porcelain paper1829
wax-paper1844
silver paper1875
lead-paper1890
tar-paper1891
baryta paper1900
coated paper1902
flint paper1916
everdamp1922
silver-foil1944
1829 Kaleidoscope 10 Feb. 263/1 In addition to the preparation of the ‘Porcelain paper and card’, Messrs. De La Rue and Co. have commenced the business of printers' card makers.
1843 U.S. Mag. & Democratic Rev. Nov. 483/1 A sumptuous edition of the New Testament printed in gold on porcelain paper of most immaculate beauty.
1914 E. A. Dawe Paper 129 Porcelain paper, thick transparent paper of the nature of celluloid, made of well-beaten pulp. Used for Christmas cards and similar work.
1962 F. T. Day Introd. to Paper 119/1 Porcelain papers, bulky variety of glazed, imitation parchment, similar to celluloid.
2002 K. Townsend Exodus 61 ̊̊Garbage mountain porcelain paper carved with skiers and snow.
porcelain shell n. a cowrie.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > class Gastropoda > [noun] > superorder Branchifera > order Prosobranchiata > section Siphonostomata > family Cypraeidae > member of
porcelain1601
porcelain shell1601
tiger-shell1753
cowrie1777
tiger-cowrie1839
1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World II. 88 The third [dye or colour] is ordinarily made of the purple & porcellane shel-fishes.
1677 R. Plot Nat. Hist. Oxford-shire 111 It must needs extravagantly exceed the biggest Nautilus or Porcellane-shell, both in latitude and number of turns.
1792 J. S. Barr tr. Comte de Buffon Nat. Hist. IV. ix. 280 For pins and other trifles they will exchange parrots, Porcelain shells, ambergris, &c.
1992 A. Bell tr. M. Toussaint-Samat Hist. Food xii. 385 Cowries, tiny porcelain-shells, still have monetary value in Africa.
porcelain spar n. Obsolete [after German Porzellanspath (J. N. Fuchs 1821, in Denkschr. der Königl. Akad. der Wissensch. zu München 1818–20: Classe der Math. u. Naturwissensch. 7 67)] Mineralogy. Obsolete. rare = wernerite n.
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1844 J. D. Dana Syst. Mineral. (ed. 2) 530 Porcelain Spar... Cleavage diagonal, rather imperfect.
porcelain tooth n. a false tooth made of porcelain (chiefly in plural).
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the world > health and disease > healing > dentistry > [noun] > denture > tooth
porcelain tooth1816
wallies1954
1816 National Reg. 13 Apr. 107/1 The persons who were entitled to the exclusive privilege of fabricating and setting the real porcelain or ‘mineral paste’ teeth, rendered a very great and essential good to many persons.
1839 C. A. Harris Dental Art xix. 313 The manufacture of porcelain teeth, did not for a long time promise to be of much advantage to dentistry.
1976 R. M. Basker et al. Prosthetic Treatm. Edentulous Patient vi. 56 If the patient's masticatory habits have been responsible for an excessive amount of wear in a short period of time, porcelain teeth must be used if the succeeding dentures are to be serviceable for an adequate period.
2004 Irish Times (Nexis) 28 Apr. 41 When I started..porcelain teeth accounted for about 90 per cent of all dentures.
porcelain tower n. [perhaps after Chinese (Nánjīng) táotǎ (Nanjing) porcelain pagoda; compare French tour de porcelaine (1696 or earlier)] now historical (a name for) a famous tower (destroyed in 1853) at Nanjing in China, which was covered with porcelain tiles.
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society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > types of building generally > [noun] > high building > type of
porcelain tower1666
gopura1862
ziggurat1877
subtower1883
1666 Philos. Trans. 1665–6 (Royal Soc.) 1 250 The Structure and Antiquity of their [sc. the Chinese] Wall; of the Magnificence of their Porcelain Tower &c.
1752 T. Salmon Universal Traveller I. ii. 8/2 The grandest of all the Chinese Buildings is the Porcelain Tower, which stands before one of the Gates of Nankin.
1842 Times 26 Nov. 5/2 We could see at a distance the inhabited part of the city and the famous porcelain tower; which, however, is porcelain in nothing but the tiles with which it is faced.
1998 Fort Worth (Texas) Star-Telegram (Nexis) 7 Aug. (Life & Arts section) 2 The seven wonders of the Middle Ages are the Roman Colosseum, catacombs of Alexandria, Great Wall of China, Stonehenge, Leaning Tower of Pisa, porcelain tower of Nanking and the mosque of Hagia Sophia.

Derivatives

ˈporcelainist n. a maker or decorator of porcelain; a connoisseur or collector of porcelain items.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > producer > potter > [noun] > maker of specific type of pottery
pot-maker1548
red potter1756
presser1769
porcelainist1868
pot-builder1890
studio potter1910
1868 G. A. Sala Notes & Sketches Paris Exhibition xiii. 159 The proficient ‘porcelainist’ is in England an exotic, an importation, rich and rare.
1895 Athenæum 2 Mar. 287/3 Signatures of potters and European (not Asiatic) porcelainists.
2003 Spectator (Hamilton, Ont.) (Nexis) 15 Jan. e6 Enid Legros-Wise, ceramicist, porcelainist and sculptor, showing until Jan. 26.
porcelainite n. Obsolete rare any of various kinds of stoneware (see quot. 1890).
ΚΠ
1883 Ogilvie's Imperial Dict. (new ed.) Porcelainite, an opaque brittle variety of jasper; porcelain-jasper.
1890 Cent. Dict. Porcelainite, a trade-name of certain kinds of fine white stoneware, jasperware, etc.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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