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Definition of Drip pan
1. Noun. Pan for catching drippings under roasting meat.
2. Noun. Pan under a refrigerator for collecting liquid waste.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Drip Pan
Literary usage of Drip pan
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. United States Supreme Court Reports by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company, United States Supreme Court (1885)
"It consisted of a heating or broiling chamber, whose front vertical side could
be removed, and was constructed as a thin, hollow box attached to a drip pan ..."
2. International Library of Technology: A Series of Textbooks for Persons by International Textbook Company (1907)
"This drip pan should be fitted under the base of the engine and to the hull before
the engine is in place. The edges should be flanged over the longitudinal ..."
3. Dyke's Automobile and Gasoline Engine Encyclopedia by Andrew Lee Dyke (1920)
"1 — Remove drip pan and «lean with gasoline or kerosene. ... Remove the drip
pan, (fig. 1). Next unscrew the drain plug or open drain cock under the crank ..."
4. HVAC and Chemical Resistance Handbook for the Engineer and Architect: A ...by Tom Arimes by Tom Arimes (1994)
"FEATURES The illustration below shows a discharge elbow and drip pan unit attached
to a safety valve with female NPT outlet. For safety valves, with flanged ..."
5. Manual of Military Hygiene for the Military Services of the United States by Valery Havard (1914)
"Inside are found, from above downward, segmented grate, drip pan and charcoal
basket-burner. The pan is 46>"2 inches long. 25 inches wide and 2,^/2 inches ..."
6. Fire Insurance Inspection & Underwriting by Charles Carroll Dominge, W. O. Lincoln (1918)
"The drip pan shall be at least two inches deep and extend four inches beyond tank
... Each pressure tank shall be set in a drip pan on the floor at a safe ..."
7. City Court Reports: Containing Decisions of the Marine Court of the City of by New York (City). Marine Court, Daniel T. Robertson, Edward Jacobs (1889)
"The clogging of the drip-pan or safe had nothing to do with the cause of the injury.
The drip-pan was never intended to carry away a steady stream or ..."