From earthen + -ware, first recorded appearance in 1673.[1]
earthenware (countable and uncountable, plural earthenwares)
- (ceramics, often attributive) An opaque, semi-porous ceramic made from clay and other compounds.
- Coordinate term: stoneware
earthenware bowl
ceramic
- Bulgarian: глинени изделия pl (glineni izdelija)
- Catalan: pisa (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 陶器 (zh) (táoqì)
- Dutch: aardewerk (nl) n
- Finnish: savitavara (fi), kivitavara (fi)
- French: poterie (fr) f
- Galician: louza (gl) f
- German: Töpferwaren (de) f pl
- Hindi: मृद्भांड m (mŕdbhāṇḍ)
- Indonesian: tembikar (id)
- Italian: coccio (it) m, terraglia f
- Japanese: 瀬戸物 (せともの, setomono), 土器 (ja) (どき, doki, かわらけ, kawarake)
- Kabuverdianu: póti
- Latin: fictilis
- Malayalam: മൺപാത്രം (ml) (maṇpātraṁ)
- Nahuatl: tepalcatl
- Navajo: łeetsʼaaʼ
- Norman: tèrr'rie f
- Persian: سفال (fa) (sofâl)
- Polish: ceramika (pl) f
- Portuguese: cerâmica (pt) f
- Punjabi: بھانڈا m (bhānḍā)
- Quechua: kaña
- Russian: гли́няные изде́лия n pl (glínjanyje izdélija), гонча́рные изде́лия n pl (gončárnyje izdélija)
- Sanskrit: मृद्भाण्ड (sa) n (mṛdbhāṇḍa)
- Spanish: loza (es) f, cerámica (es) f
- Ukrainian: череп'яний посуд (čerepʺjanyj posud), гонча́рні ви́роби (hončárni výroby)
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