n
Ornate Italian pottery from the 15th century.
n
(ceramics) Pottery decorated with a combination of contrastingly coloured clays, designed to resemble the layers of colour in an agate stone.
n
a jug, pitcher, etc. made of porous earthenware.
n
A clay-based earthen plaster.
n
A lead ore found in Cornwall, England, and used to give a green glaze to pottery.
n
decorative glass articles, notably vases, that are coloured or of artistic form or design beyond the requirements of utility.
n
A style of glass with a helical pattern, made by caneworking.
n
A soft clay used for moulding or decorating pottery
n
A style of pottery from Oaxaca, Mexico, distinguished by its black metallic sheen and unique designs.
n
A type of unglazed pottery.
n
Articles made from basalt.
n
A porcelain-like kind of decorative pottery with a high gloss, which is sometimes iridescent.
n
(antiques) A distinctive type of glazed ceramic marble, usually blue or brown.
n
A kind of metallic ware made in India, composed zinc, tin, and lead, in which ornaments of gold and silver are inlaid or damascened.
n
(uncountable) A form of unglazed earthenware.
n
(ceramics) A form of unglazed earthenware; biscuit.
n
A doll made partially or wholly out of bisque porcelain.
n
A type of Japanese pottery traditionally from Bizen province, characterized by a reddish-brown color; significant hardness due to high-temperature firing; absence of glaze; and markings resulting from wood-burning kiln firing.
n
Alternative form of Bizen ware [A type of Japanese pottery traditionally from Bizen province, characterized by a reddish-brown color; significant hardness due to high-temperature firing; absence of glaze; and markings resulting from wood-burning kiln firing.]
n
A simple form of gunpowder, consisting of a mixture of saltpetre, charcoal, and sulfur.
n
Any pottery of a black or nearly black colour.
n
(ceramics) The apparatus used for blunging (mixing clay with water to make pottery).
n
an English form of porcelain made from clay mixed with bone ash
n
Articles made from brass, treated as a group.
n
Articles made from bronze, treated as a group.
n
A teapot made from red terracotta clay and covered in Rockingham brown glaze, originally made in Stoke-on-Trent by the Elder Brothers circa 1695.
n
A type of dark grey Etruscan terracotta pottery.
n
Any pottery of a buff colour.
n
A type of decorated ceramic ware, featuring embossed (or sometimes stencilled) figures or motifs in contrasting colour on a plain ground.
n
A form of traditional unglazed light-brown stoneware.
n
A red clay from the Upper Missouri region, used by the natives for their pipes.
n
Articles made from cedar.
n
A ceramic ware with a pale green glaze.
n
(countable) An object made of this material
n
(US) Sculpted figurines usually made of painted plaster of Paris.
n
(of ceramics) a French softpaste porcelain produced between 1730 and 1800
n
(art) A kind of enamelled pottery.
n
A type of porcelain once manufactured there.
n
(uncountable, chiefly US, dated) Cheaper and lower-quality ceramic and ceramic tableware, distinguished from porcelain.
n
alternative form of china clay [(mineralogy) Kaolin.]
n
A type of doll made at least partly out of glazed porcelain.
n
Alternative form of chinaware [Synonym of china: porcelain tableware.]
n
Alternative form of chinaware [Synonym of china: porcelain tableware.]
n
Synonym of china: porcelain tableware.
n
A style of transferware ceramics decorated with a dense pattern of flowers, similar to chintz textile patterns.
n
(UK, slang, rare) A person from the Potteries region of England.
n
Articles made from clay.
n
(Now chiefly dialectal) Earthenware.
adj
(regional) earthenware (attributive)
adj
Alternative form of cloam [(Now chiefly dialectal) Of earthenware.]
v
To build a pot (etc) with clay coils.
n
Articles made from copper.
n
Articles made with a crackle glaze.
n
(ceramics) Cream-coloured earthenware produced chiefly from 1750 to 1820 by the potters of Staffordshire, England
n
A piece of broken pottery, a shard.
n
Crocks or earthenware vessels, especially domestic utensils, collectively.
n
A kind of salt-glazed stoneware made in Burslem.
n
Items, especially tableware, made from crystal.
n
A piece of blue and white earthenware produced in Delft, Netherlands.
n
Dutch tin-glazed earthenware made in Delft, Holland, especially white pottery decorated under the glaze with a blue pigment.
n
Alternative spelling of Delft (“style of earthenware”) [A city in South Holland, Netherlands known for its production of blue and white pottery.]
n
A form of unglazed pottery made from drab-coloured clay.
n
A variety of china, originally manufactured in the city, but manufactured in Meissen from the 18th century.
n
(ceramics) A kind of decorated porcelain made near Dresden in Saxony.
n
(ceramics, often attributive) An opaque, semi-porous ceramic made from clay and other compounds.
n
(ceramics, countable and uncountable) Pottery vessels with decorated rims.
n
(art) The art or process of flooding transparent coloured glaze over designs stamped or moulded on earthenware or porcelain
n
Articles coated with decorative enamel
n
A clay slip which is colored with metal oxides or stains, used for coating the surface of a pot either before or after bisque firing.
n
A type of tin-glazed earthenware ceramic.
n
A kind of decorative Chinese porcelain.
n
(pottery) A style of gaudy, vibrant, pottery decoration, common in West Germany from the 1950s to the 1970s.
adj
(pottery) Of or relating to earthenware
n
A piece of pottery decorated with representations of natural objects.
n
A superior kind of earthenware made with flint.
n
A style of white earthenware, sometimes porcelain, that originated in the Regency era among the Staffordshire potters of England.
n
A combination of clay and frit used to create fritware.
n
A fine clay used in fulling cloth.
n
Alternative form of gault [A type of stiff, blue clay, sometimes used for making bricks.]
n
Pewter vessels in general.
n
(uncountable) Glassware.
n
Ironware that has been coated with a layer of vitreous enamel with a swirled or speckled pattern resembling granite.
n
Alternative form of greyware [A style of ancient grey pottery painted with geometric patterns.]
n
An object composed of a ceramic compound, usually clay or powder, before it has been fired.
n
(ceramics, rare) A form of Chinese pottery having a green glaze.
n
A style of ancient grey pottery painted with geometric patterns.
n
(ceramics) A type of pre-fired clay that has been ground and screened to a specific particle size.
n
(ceramics) The first process in decorating by means of enamelled colour.
n
The style of blue and white pottery that originates in Gzhel.
n
A refined kaolin clay used in making Chinese porcelain.
n
(historical) A form of Ancient Greek pottery: a miniature version of the hydria.
n
Japanese porcelain wares (made in the town of Arita and exported from the port of Imari, particularly around the 17th century).
n
A style of restoration of ceramics that aims to conceal any damage completely.
n
A type of vitreous pottery similar to stoneware
n
Articles made of iron, as household utensils, tools, and the like.
n
A fine ware with an ivory-white glaze.
n
Alternative form of Iznikware [(ceramics) A kind of pottery from the town of İznik in western Anatolia, produced from the last quarter of the 15th century until the end of the 17th century.]
n
(ceramics) A kind of pottery from the town of İznik in western Anatolia, produced from the last quarter of the 15th century until the end of the 17th century.
n
A black glazed earthenware from Jackfield in Shropshire
n
crockery made from jade, or having a jade green colour
n
Alternative spelling of jasperware [(ceramics) A form of pottery that has a stoneware body which is either white or colored, which is noted for its matte finish. It is a popular blue-and-white ware, but it comes in many other colors.]
n
(ceramics) A form of pottery that has a stoneware body which is either white or colored, which is noted for its matte finish. It is a popular blue-and-white ware, but it comes in many other colors.
n
The Japanese art of repairing broken pottery with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold or similar material, highlighting the cracks instead of disguising them.
n
A style of Persian fritware pottery, believed to have been created during the Safavid Period in the northwestern part of what is now Iran.
n
Alternative form of lacquerware [Decorative items coated with lacquer.]
n
Decorative items coated with lacquer.
n
A kind of cheap pottery made of iron slag cast into tiles, urns, tabletops, etc., resembling lava in appearance.
n
A style of European porcelain in which the figures are seen by transmitted light
n
crystal art sculptures, especially created through lost-wax method (Pate de Verre)
n
A type of pottery having an iridescent metallic glaze
n
Alternative spelling of lusterware [A type of pottery having an iridescent metallic glaze]
n
A form of bentonite used in ceramics manufacture
n
Alternative form of majolica (“earthenware coated with opaque white tin glaze”) [Earthenware decorated with coloured lead silicate glazes applied directly to an unglazed body.]
n
Alternative form of majolicaware [Synonym of majolica]
n
Earthenware decorated with coloured lead silicate glazes applied directly to an unglazed body.
n
(historical) A large glazed pottery vessel of a kind exported from Martaban, used to hold water, rice, fish, etc.
n
(historical) A style of Asian ceramics having a thin, bright green glaze applied on a white biscuit, allowing the light to pass through.
n
A brand of dinnerware moulded from melamine resin, popular in the mid-twentieth century.
n
Italian pottery of the epoch and general character of majolica, but less brilliantly decorated; especially, such pottery without tin enamel, but painted and glazed.
n
Alternative form of millefiori [A decorative glassware technique using a mosaic of coloured beads.]
n
The pottery of the era, famed for its high quality
n
A slip inlay style of ceramic pottery adopted from Korea, probably in the 16th century.
n
Pottery decorated with inspirational or humorous text.
adj
(UK dialectal, Northern England) Made of earthenware in contradistinction to china, metal, wood, etc.
n
(historical) An ornamental stone for vases, etc. described by Pliny, most probably fluorspar; it was first brought to Rome by Pompey, 61 B.C.
adj
Made of the stone or material called murrha by the Ancient Romans; applied to certain costly vases of great beauty and delicacy used by the luxurious in Rome as wine cups.
n
A style of restoration of ceramics that leaves any cracks visible.
n
Articles made from niello.
n
Decorated china intended for a children's nursery.
n
Synonym of epinetron (“Attic pottery item”)
n
Japanese pottery made with a green copper glaze and bold painted designs.
n
Tin-glazed earthenware (majolica) of the kind originally manufactured in Orvieto, Italy, in the 13th century.
n
The outer layer or coat of glaze on a piece of pottery
n
Ceramics produced in the style of the famous French potter Bernard Palissy (c. 1510-1590), characterized by three-dimensional modelled animals, often aquatic creatures such as snakes, fish, lizards, frogs and snails, arranged on large platters.
n
Articles made from paper.
n
A ceramic ware, a kind of bisque porcelain, supposed to resemble the fine-textured white marble of Paros.
n
Synonym of Parian (type of porcelain)
n
variegated pottery made from a mixture of clays of different colours
n
Powdered feldspar, kaolin, or quartz, used in the manufacture of porcelain.
n
Alternative form of petunse [Powdered feldspar, kaolin, or quartz, used in the manufacture of porcelain.]
n
Items made of pewter; pewterware.
n
Articles made from pewter.
n
A decorative table ornament made from sugar, etc.
n
ancient minimally decorated pottery found in Oceania
n
(pottery) A boiler in which clay is beaten by a wheel to a creamy consistency.
n
(usually uncountable) Synonym of china: porcelain tableware.
n
Items made from porcelain.
n
(often archaeology) A piece of ceramic from pottery, often found on an archaeological site.
n
One who hawks crockery or earthenware.
n
(idiomatic, biblical) A nation or kingdom.
n
The potter's craft or art: making vessels from clay.
n
Pottery produced by pressing clay into moulds.
n
An early Chinese glazed stoneware, from the Han dynasty, that had some of the characteristics of true porcelain without its translucency.
n
(Cornwall) A soft, white clay
n
Any form or mold used for making clay pots by hand.
n
A type of Wedgwood creamware.
n
A polishing material made of potter's clay that has failed in baking.
n
A form of Japanese pottery traditionally used in the tea ceremony, characterized by hand-moulding of the clay (as opposed to turning it on a potter's wheel), low firing temperatures, and the removal of pieces from the kiln while still glowing hot.
n
Articles made from rattan.
n
A type of terracotta given a red colour by its concentration of ferrous oxide.
n
A 19th-century style of finely decorated porcelain.
n
A form of terracotta of a light-brown paste, having a brown glaze.
n
(obsolete) heavy pewter goods
n
Fireclay used to make ceramic casings.
n
(archaeology) A form of terra sigillata tableware made in ancient Gaul.
n
A kind of decoration on Chinese pottery using glazes or slip, predominantly in the three colours of brown (or amber), green, and a creamy off-white, and particularly associated with the Tang Dynasty (618–907) and its tomb figures.
n
Coarse-glazed earthenware for sewer pipes.
n
Alternative form of sanitary ware [The ceramic wares designed for use in a bathroom/toilet, including WCs, sinks, urinals, etc.]
n
A kind of ornamental hard-glazed pottery made at Satsuma in Japan.
n
An unusually shaped rock, traditionally appreciated by Chinese scholars.
n
(rare) scroddled pottery
n
Pottery having a transparent glaze instead of the opaque enamel of true faience.
n
A style of Japanese pottery, originating in present-day Gifu prefecture.
n
(collectively) Cutlery and other eating utensils, whether silver or made from some other white metal.
n
Anything made from silver.
n
(countable) A piece of pottery made by this technique
n
A type of pottery identified by its primary decorating process where slip is placed onto the dry surface by dipping, painting or splashing.
adj
Alternative form of softpaste [(of ceramics) Having a body formulation that combines clay and frit, mainly used in the production of decorative figures and domestic wares in 18th-century Europe; also sometimes applied to other soft porcelains such as bone china.]
adj
Alternative form of softpaste [(of ceramics) Having a body formulation that combines clay and frit, mainly used in the production of decorative figures and domestic wares in 18th-century Europe; also sometimes applied to other soft porcelains such as bone china.]
adj
(of ceramics) Having a body formulation that combines clay and frit, mainly used in the production of decorative figures and domestic wares in 18th-century Europe; also sometimes applied to other soft porcelains such as bone china.
n
Traditional pottery decorated by spattering or sponging on colour
n
A type of pottery that is fired at a high temperature and is dense, opaque and nonporous.
n
(obsolete) A kind of Bohemian earthenware resembling Wedgwood.
n
(often attributive) A type of expensive porcelain traditionally made there.
n
Porcelain manufactured in Sèvres, France, especially in the national factory situated there.
n
A kind of Mexican majolica pottery with a milky-white glaze.
n
(often attributive) A style of terracotta statuary from the 5th to 3rd centuries BCE.
n
Alternative spelling of tenmoku [A dark glaze with a surface that resembles oil spotting, made of feldspar, limestone, and iron oxide.]
n
A ware imitating hardpaste or natural porcelain.
n
A dark glaze with a surface that resembles oil spotting, made of feldspar, limestone, and iron oxide.
n
Alternative spelling of terracotta [A hard red-brown unglazed earthenware, used for pottery and building construction.]
n
Alternative form of terracotta [A hard red-brown unglazed earthenware, used for pottery and building construction.]
n
A hard red-brown unglazed earthenware, used for pottery and building construction.
n
tole (decorative metallic items)
n
(art) A small ceramic plate in the Italian style.
n
A flat heap of moist, crushed silver ore, prepared for the patio process.
n
A style of ceramics decorated by transfer printing.
n
Household articles made of wood.
adj
(ceramics) Having a delicately crackled surface.
n
A decorative slip applied to the surface of pottery before glazing.
n
An ancient style of Greek pottery with a glaze-like paint.
n
Articles of glassware collectively.
n
(ceramics) The ceramic ware with white embossed cameos made by this potter, and the company that bears his name.
n
Any pottery of a white or nearly white colour.
n
Articles made from wicker.
n
Articles made from wood.
n
Articles made from wood.
n
A type of earthenware made from yellow clay.
n
(ceramics) Yue ware, a southern Chinese style of celadon-glazed stoneware.
n
Articles made from zinc.
Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook
feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters
based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some
of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the
clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe
every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be
missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their
names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
Our daily word games Threepeat and Compound Your Joy are going strong. Bookmark and enjoy!
Today's secret word is 6 letters and means "Not working as originally intended." Can you find it?