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Definition of Drip pot
1. Noun. A coffeepot for making drip coffee.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Drip Pot
Literary usage of Drip pot
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. All about Coffee by William Harrison Ukers (1922)
"The first French patent on an improved French drip pot for making coffee "by ...
movable, strainer part made of tin, after the French drip pot pattern. ..."
2. Proceedings of the American Gas Institute by American Gas Institute (1914)
"lip from the drip pot. The plants having a high percentage of unpaved streets
use off-set pumping pipes. This could have been anticipated. ..."
3. Steam Power Plant Piping System: Their Design, Installation and Maintenance by William Lorenzo Morris (1909)
"The different drains may be attached to a drip pot located in the main. ...
The drip pot, Fig. 339 (R2~4), is especially suited for basements where the ..."
4. Mrs. Scott's North American Seasonal Cook Book: Spring, Summer, Autumn and by Anna B. (Storck) Scott (1921)
"Rinse drip pot with hot water. Place the finely ground or pulverized ... Use drip
pot. Put the coffee in the muslin bag and pour over this water which has ..."
5. Heat Engineering: A Textbook of Applied Thermodynamics for Engineers and by Arthur Maurice Greene (1915)
"The water in the drip pot is drawn off at any convenient time into a cup of cold
water J so that the water level falls below the string. ..."
6. American Gas Works Practice: Standard Practical Methods in Gas Fitting by George Wehrle (1919)
"A drip pot should never be located away from the main, necessitating long ...
If the drip-pot is not a regular line drio inserted in the pipe line it should ..."
7. International Library of Technology: A Series of Textbooks for Persons by International Textbook Company (1922)
"All gas mains must be laid in perfect alinement without sags, and at every low
point a drip pot must be set. Fig. 1 shows an ordinary drip pot. ..."
8. The Chinese Sugar-cane: Its History, Mode of Culture, Manufacture of the by James F. C. Hyde (1857)
"... then pour into a conical sugar-mould, stopped at its lower end, and place the
nose of this mould on a drip-pot. This sugar-mould should be of the kind ..."