| 单词 | skillet | 
| 释义 | skilletn.1 1.  A cooking utensil of brass, copper, or other metal, usually having three or four feet and a long handle, used for boiling liquids, stewing meat, etc.; a saucepan, stew-pan. (See also quot. 1866 at  α. .) Now chiefly North American, a frying pan, a (heavy) cooking-pan. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > equipment for food preparation > cooking vessel or pot > 			[noun]		 > pot with legs or feet posnetc1350 yetling1354 skillet1403 skill1600 Barnstaple oven1716 bastable oven1748 goashore1834 bastable1836 kaffir pot1863 kohua1901 potjie1985 the world > food and drink > food > food manufacture and preparation > equipment for food preparation > cooking vessel or pot > 			[noun]		 > pan > frying-pan frying pan1382 frixory1657 spider1807 fry-pan1832 fryer1859 padella1874 fish-fryer1892 chip pan1901 skillet1917 α.  β. 1519    Maldon 		(Essex)	 Liber B f. 160v  				iiie ketills, a skillet, ixe platers.1540    J. Palsgrave tr.  G. Gnapheus Comedye of Acolastus sig. Mijv  				He shall gyue a lydde or couer worthy for the skyllet or lyttell panne.1578    H. Lyte tr.  R. Dodoens Niewe Herball  ii. xlii. 201  				The juyce of the leaves boyled..in a brasen pipkin or skillet is very good to heale..old ulcers.1600    R. Surflet tr.  C. Estienne  & J. Liébault Maison Rustique  iii. l. 541  				Boile them in fresh water in some skillet.1658    R. White tr.  K. Digby Late Disc. Cure Wounds 		(1660)	 118  				In boyling the milk it swells so high that it sheds over the brim of the skillet.1707    H. Sloane Voy. Islands I. p. lxii  				I have seen some try to boil Cane-juice to sugar in an ordinary Skillet.1758    Philos. Trans. 1757 		(Royal Soc.)	 50 108  				The lightning..melted an old copper skillet.1801    J. Wolcot Epist. to Count Rumford in  Wks. 		(1812)	 V. 136  				Whose tinkers form..Skillets and saucepans.1859    J. M. Jephson  & L. Reeve Narr. Walking Tour Brittany v. 55  				The dressers were resplendent with immense brass skillets.1881    Cornhill Mag. Mar. 364  				Armed with a skillet she happened..to have been scouring.1917    C. Mathewson Second Base Sloan vi. 73  				[Nearby lay] an iron skillet with the handle broken off.1932    W. Faulkner Light in August xvii. 382  				He stands, tall, mis~shapen, lonely in his lonely and illkept kitchen, holding in his hand an iron skillet in which yesterday's old grease is bleakly caked.1959    A. Sexton in  Audience Autumn 31  				I have found the warm caves in the woods, filled them with skillets, carvings, shelves, closets.1968    Globe & Mail Mag. 		(Toronto)	 13 Jan. 16/3  				Cook, stirring constantly, over medium heat, until slightly thickened. Add frankfurters. Cover skillet, simmer 8 to 10 minutes.1979    Arizona Daily Star 5 Aug. (Parade Suppl.) 12/4  				Heat oil in paella pan or wide skillet.1403    in  W. H. Stevenson Rec. Borough Nottingham 		(1883)	 II. 20  				Unius skelett aeneae, iij d. c1450    Middle Eng. Med. Bk. (Heinrich) 131  				Take crownes of whitsour bred, smal myed on a gratour, & do hit in a skelet. 1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 271/1  				Skellet with a handell, poillon. 1576    G. Baker tr.  C. Gesner Newe Jewell of Health  iii. f. 144v  				These after putting into a possenet or skellet, set..ouer the fyre. 1616    G. Markham tr.  C. Estienne et al.  Maison Rustique 		(rev. ed.)	  ii. xix. 174  				Then put it into a verie cleane sweet pipkin or skellet. 1669    S. Sturmy Mariners Mag.  v. xii. 67  				Take an Iron Pot or Skellet,..set it on the Fire. 1719    Will of J. Hirst (Yorks.)  				A dozen of trenchers, a skellet, a spit and racks. 1838    W. Holloway Gen. Dict. Provincialisms  				Skellit, a small pot with a handle. 1866    J. E. Brogden Provinc. Words Lincs.  				Skellet,..a funnel shaped vessel, used principally for heating beer and milk.  2.  dialect. (See quot. 1823.) ΚΠ 1823    E. Moor Suffolk Words 353  				Skillet, the thin brass perforated implement used for skimming or fletting the cream off milk. Compounds  attributive and in other combinations, as  skillet-maker,  skillet pan,  skillet soot; also  skilletful. ΚΠ 1552    in  S. Tymms Wills & Inventories Bury St. Edmunds 		(1850)	 142  				Too brasse pannys, to kattylls, one skyllet panne. 1611    R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues  				Poislier,..a Skellet-maker, or Frying-panne maker. 1641    J. Milton Animadversions 67  				Your confutation hath..left nothing upon it, but a foule taste of your skillet soot. 1888    Cent. Mag. Jan. 373/2  				Mrs. Pearson..had baked a skilletful of hot biscuits. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022). skilletn.2 1.  (See quot. 1888.) Also in more general applications. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > wood > wood in specific form > 			[noun]		 > strip of wood > for making matchboxes or punnets skillet1888 1888    Pall Mall Gaz. 31 July 3/1  				Here a block is being cut into the right length and shape for ‘skillets’, the wooden strips of which matchboxes are made. 1959    Gloss. Terms Packaging 		(B.S.I.)	 19  				Skillet, a piece of scored timber rotarily cut into veneers which forms part of the finished punnet. 1968    Guardian 18 Nov. 6/4  				Mr Moreland keeps a selection of ‘skillets’ (flattened out matchboxes) in his wallet to pass round at social gatherings.  2.  A thick flat piece of silver or other precious metal ( Cent. Dict.). This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online June 2019). <  | 
	
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