1.The rush of heat makes the caldron boil furiously, so the proteins and oils from the fish rise to the top and flow over the edge.
英:[ˈkɔ:drən]
美:[ˈkɔldrən]
cal·dron
kawl drn
cauldron
cauldron 的拼写是其他词典编辑所偏爱的。
calf1 of 2noun
the young of the domestic cow
the young of various other large animals (as the elephant or whale)
plural calfs calfskin
calf2 of 2noun
the fleshy or muscular back part of the leg below the knee
calendar1 of 2noun
an arrangement of time into days, weeks, months, and years
a chart showing the days, weeks, and months of a year
a list of items in proper order
a schedule of coming events
calendar2 of 2verb
to enter in a calendar
calendar1 of 2noun
an arrangement of time into days, weeks, months, and years
a chart showing the days, weeks, and months of a year
a list of items in proper order
a schedule of coming events
calendar2 of 2verb
to enter in a calendar
caldron
1.The rush of heat makes the caldron boil furiously, so the proteins and oils from the fish rise to the top and flow over the edge.
2.Instead of enlarging the action, they bring it closer, pulling us right up to the edge of the caldron and then tossing us in.
3.You throw all these things in a caldron and stir it up and see what happens.”
4.But like an Impressionist painting, the image is clearer farther away — that of a woman carrying a burning caldron on her head.
5.Its holdings include images of cats and brooms and caldrons, plants used in folk remedies, implements for divination, witches’ garments and tools, and items related to Cornish lore and sea witchcraft.
6.Each part is added separately, according to its own cooking time, and, at some point, a stewing hen or capon is usually added to the caldron, too.
7.She made that outdoors over an open fire, and she’d put pennies in the caldron to keep it from sticking.
8.But it’s an immensely musical album: a dense caldron of funk, jazz and soul that draws hope and determination from the past, confronting problems that past eras have left unsolved.
9.Our next-door neighbor and her sons had set up a table on sawhorses nearby, and a caldron of water bubbled over the fire in the pit, tended by some people I didn’t recognize.
10.But there were a few small chiles lurking in there, and they soon enough registered their presence in my throat and in my gut, which was suddenly a caldron.
11.The fact that you can barely hear the chorus, singing full throttle — let alone the strings and winds — evokes the apocalyptic image of sinners being pulled under in a caldron of noise.
12.The caldrons, representing communities like Austin and Englewood, mostly were lowered by politicians and influential staffers of city agencies.
13.Dr. von Braun’s rocket lifted off the pad in a caldron of fire and smoke and went right up into the night sky without a moment of hesitation.
14.I have to find a caldron to log completely in water.
我得找个大锅子把树干浸在冷水里。
15.He preferred Greenwich Village, where he eventually bought an apartment, but Harlem was a symbol: a caldron of black diversity and cultural production.
16.The “double, double, toil and trouble” is among the play’s most memorable passages, the one with three witches, a bubbling caldron and an eye of newt.
17.Hot mulled wine is ladled from a steaming caldron over a fire — serving as a magnet for the gang.
18.The Middle East has been a scalding caldron for as long as we can remember.
19.When she sang about unrequited love, adversity or pride in the Romany culture, her voice was a caldron of emotions.
20.There seemed no safe place in the barricaded ancient city of Sana, which has become a caldron of revolt for tribesmen, demonstrators and former soldiers battling forces loyal to President Ali Abdullah Saleh.