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Definition of Hot plate
1. Noun. A portable electric appliance for heating or cooking or keeping food warm.
Definition of Hot plate
1. Noun. (alternative form of hotplate) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Hot Plate
Literary usage of Hot plate
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Journal by New York Microscopical Society, Chartered Insurance Institute, World Resources Institute, Institute of Transport (London, England) (1902)
"In oatcake bakeries the hot-plate is the one hot plate. form of baking appliance
in use, but there are quite a variety of patterns. It may be brick built, ..."
2. The Popular Science Monthly (1873)
"The hot-plate is the third important part of the modern close cooking-range.
Count Rumford proposed that the top of a hot-plate should be covered with sand, ..."
3. The Popular Science Monthly by Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress) (1873)
"The hot-plate is the third important part of the modern close ing-range.
Count Rumford proposed that the top of a hot-plate be covered with sand, ..."
4. Weather by Evan-Moor Educational Publishers, Rose/Graf, Mike Graf, Nancy Schoefl, Evan-Moor (Firm (2002)
"Tell them that since a hot plate and hot water will be used, they need to use
their best ... Place a beaker of water on the hot plate and turn it to "high. ..."
5. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London by Royal Society (Great Britain) (1871)
"The hot plate was feebly positive. Cyanide of Potassium. Value of Deflection.
... The hot plate was negative, and the plates were not tarnished at all. ..."
6. Practical Shipbuilding: A Treatise on the Structural Design and Building of by A. Campbell Holms (1918)
"Its removal is effected during the rolling, by spraying water on the hot plate,
or by rolling in switches of brushwood, for, as the latter pass between the ..."
7. Transactions of the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and (1905)
"These walls support the hot-plate having its upper surface 43 in. above the level of
... A detailed dimensioned drawing of the hot-plate is given in Fig. 4. ..."