boilery
nounEtymology
Compare French bouillerie.
- derived from bouillerie
Definitions
A buisness (and place of business) that engages primarily in boiling, such as in the…
A buisness (and place of business) that engages primarily in boiling, such as in the boiling of sugarcane juice to make sugar, the boiling of brine to make salt, the boiling of soap or tallow, the boiling of bones to make glue, etc.
- Holonyms: saltworks; sugarhouse
- By the grant of a boilery of salt it is said that the soil passes, for it is the whole profit of the soil, and the water being fixed in a certain place within the bounds and compass of the well is considered a part of the soil.
A room or area where there is equipment for boiling that is part of a larger…
A room or area where there is equipment for boiling that is part of a larger establishment, such as equipment for rendering blubber on board a whaling vessel, or vats for boiling laundry as part of a large farmhouse.
- The time has gone by when a boilery for urine was regarded as indispensable for a physician's scientific progress, and I dare say we are all grateful for this deliverance.
- The Factory is placed in the 'tween deck, i.e., aft the blubber boilery, and forward of it the press boilery and Hartmann apparatus.
- All the appointments, from the carthouse to the boilery, stood in need of repair.
The neighborhood
- neighborboiler
- neighborboilerhouse
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for boilery. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA