¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Panchion
1. pancheon [n -S] - See also: pancheon
Lexicographical Neighbors of Panchion
Literary usage of Panchion
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Vocabulary of East Anglia: An Attempt to Record the Vulgar Tongue of the by Robert Forby (1830)
"It may be observed, that these words, with panchion before, exhibit, in this one
instance, an odd resemblance to the formation of ..."
2. Sons and Lovers by David Herbert Lawrence (1922)
"The poem was finished; he took the bread out of the oven, arranging the burnt
loaves at the bottom of the panchion, the good ones at the top. ..."
3. Publications by English Dialect Society (1896)
"panchion. A large broad pan. Augm. of Pan. Pane. A regular division of some sorts
of husbandry work, as digging, sowing, weeding, ..."
4. The Archaeological Journal by British Archaeological Association (1873)
"... while the Easternmost oven seemed to have been used only for baking a coarse
red panchion, on which a cover with a knob for a handle was fixed; ..."
5. The New Forest: Its History and Its Scenery by John Richard de Capel Wise (1895)
"... we found only the necks of various unguent bottles, whilst the easternmost
oven seems to have been employed in baking only a coarse red panchion, ..."
6. Lean's Collectanea by Vincent Stuckey Lean, Julia Lucy Woodward (1902)
"Doncaster Roll-abouts, Melton egg-shells, Mexborough cracked panchion and Darfield
merry bells. N., VIII., v. 425. ..."