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pot

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Languages (25)

Translingual

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Etymology

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Clipping of English Potawatomi .

Symbol

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pot

  1. (international standards ) ISO 639-3 language code for Potawatomi .

See also

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English

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English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia
Cooking pot on a stove.

Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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Etymology tree
Proto-Germanic *puttaz
Old English pott
Proto-Germanic *puttaz
Frankish *pott der.
Vulgar Latin pottum
Old French pot bor.
Middle English pot
English pot

    From Middle English pot , potte , from Old English pott ("pot") and Old French pot ("pot") (probably from Frankish *pott ); both Old English and Frankish from Proto-Germanic *puttaz ("pot"), from Proto-Indo-European *budnós ("a type of vessel").

    Cognate with Saterland Frisian Pot ("pot"), Dutch pot ("pot"), German Low German Pott ("pot"), German Pott ("pot"), Swedish potta ("chamber pot"), Icelandic pottur ("tub, pot"), Old Armenian պոյտն (poytn, "pot, earthen pot"). Also, Old Norse pottr ("pot, tub, basin").

    The sense of ruin or deterioration was originally a general allusion to "being chopped up and tossed in a (normally fiery) pot, like a piece of meat" (i.e. to get wasted or done with (by someone)). The 'clean' slang term which was used in reference to toilet rooms and lavatories apparently derives from English chamberpots, although now usually encountered as potty in the context of children's toilet training.

    Noun

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    pot (plural pots )

    1. A flat-bottomed vessel (usually metal) used for cooking food, possibly excluding saucepans (see usage notes).
      Synonyms: cookpot , cooking pot
      1. (preceded by definite article) The nominal household cooking vessel, metaphorically standing for the supply of food for a meal, or for the home.
        • 1999, Robert Lacey, Danny Danziger, The Year 1000: What life was like at the turn of The First Millennium, London: Abacus, published 2000, page 143:
          Hunting in the year 1000 was still a democratic pastime. Every free-born Anglo-Saxon had the right to enter the forest and bring home game for the pot.
    2. Various similar open-topped vessels, particularly
      1. A vessel (usually earthenware) used with a seal for storing food, such as a honeypot.
      2. A vessel used for brewing or serving drinks: a coffee pot or teapot.
      3. A vessel used to hold soil for growing plants, particularly flowers: a flowerpot.
        • 1918, W[illiam] B[abington] Maxwell, chapter X, in The Mirror and the Lamp, Indianapolis, Ind.: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, →OCLC:
          He looked round the poor room, at the distempered walls, and the bad engravings in meretricious frames, the crinkly paper and wax flowers on the chiffonier; and he thought of a room like Father Bryan's, with panelling, with cut glass, with tulips in silver pots, such a room as he had hoped to have for his own.
      4. A vessel used for urination and defecation: a chamber pot; (figuratively , slang ) a toilet; the lavatory.
        Synonyms: can , chamber pot , potty , shitpot ; see also Thesaurus:chamber pot
        Shit or get off the pot .
        • 2011, Ben Zeller, Secrets of Beaver Creek, page 204:
          "Clinton," Gail cried from outside, "are you going to sit on the pot all day?"
        • 2011 December 27, Ken Jacuzzi with Diane Holloway, "This Is Your Life, Ken Jacuzzi!", in Jacuzzi: A Father’s Invention to Ease a Son’s Pain, Bloomington, Ind.: iUniverse, →ISBN, part III (Learning, Marriage, and Stuff), page 385:
          Near bedtime, about 10 p.m. or so, I sit on the pot. My "routine" is at night so as to shorten the morning get readies and start work on time. Sometimes the p.m. pot routine is successful, sometimes not. I can only blame myself, of course, when the big event doesn’t occur. I need to drink more water during the day.
        • 2023 June 26, Dwight Garner, "Let’s Talk About the Bathroom Scene", in The New York Times Book Review [1] , New York, N.Y.: The New York Times Company, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 26 June 2023:
          Alfred Hitchcock once told François Truffaut he wanted to make a film that would examine a city entirely through food and, unusually, waste. [...] Samuel Beckett expressed this artistic vision on a more intimate scale. "Dish and pot, dish and pot, these are the poles," his narrator says in "Malone Dies." The dish, we discuss freely: Food, in literature and elsewhere, is part of what we talk about when we talk about culture. The pot, at the other end of the alimentary canal, remains a transgressive topic.
      5. A crucible: a melting pot.
      6. (Maine ) A pot-shaped trap used for catching lobsters or other seafood: a lobster pot.
        Synonyms: lobster pot , lobster trap
      7. A pot-shaped metal or earthenware extension of a flue above the top of a chimney: a chimney pot.
      8. A perforated cask for draining sugar.
      9. (obsolete ) An earthen or pewter cup or mug used for drinking liquor.
        • 1930, Norman Lindsay, Redheap , Sydney, N.S.W.: Ure Smith, →OCLC, page 85:
          "So kindly keep the vainglorious enumeration of your pots for the benefit of those village idiots who compose your particular set of boozing companions."
      10. (Australia , Queensland , Victoria , Tasmania ) A glass of beer in Australia whose size varies regionally but is typically around 10 fl oz (285 mL).
        Synonyms: (New South Wales, Western Australia) middy , (South Australia) schooner
        • 2009, Deborah Penrith et al., Live & Work in Australia, page 187:
          There are plenty of pubs and bars all over Australia (serving beer in schooners – 425ml or middies/pots ~285ml), and if you don′t fancy those you can drink in wine bars, pleasant beer gardens, or with friends at home.
    3. (archaic except in place names) Pothole, sinkhole, vertical cave.
      Rowten Pot
    4. A shallow hole used in certain games played with marbles. The marbles placed in it are called potsies.
    5. (slang , uncountable ) Ruin or deterioration.
      After his arrest, his prospects went to pot.
    6. (historical ) Any of various traditional units of volume notionally based on the capacity of a pot.
    7. (historical ) An iron hat with a broad brim worn as a helmet.
      • 1786, Francis Grose, A Treatise on Ancient Armour and Weapons, page 12:
        The pot is an iron hat with broad brims: there are many under the denomination in the Tower, said to have been taken from the French...
    8. (rail transport ) A pot-shaped non- conducting (usually ceramic) stand that supports an electrified rail while insulating it from the ground.
    9. (gambling , poker ) The money available to be won in a hand of poker or a round of other games of chance; (figuratively ) any sum of money being used as an enticement.
      Synonyms: kitty , pool
      No one's interested. You need to sweeten the pot.
    10. An allocation of money for a particular purpose.
      a pension pot
      a savings pot
    11. (UK , horse racing , slang ) A favorite: a heavily-backed horse.
    12. (slang ) Clipping of potbelly ("a pot-shaped belly, a paunch ").
      • 1994, Quentin Tarantino, Pulp Fiction :
        Fabienne: I wish I had a pot.
        Butch: You were lookin' in the mirror and you wish you had some pot?
        Fabienne: A pot. A pot belly. Pot bellies are sexy.
        Butch: Well you should be happy, 'cause you do.
        Fabienne: Shut up, Fatso! I don't have a pot! I have a bit of a tummy, like Madonna when she did "Lucky Star". It's not the same thing.
    13. (slang ) Clipping of potshot ("a haphazard shot; an easy or cheap shot ").
      • 2011 October 1, Tom Fordyce, "Rugby World Cup 2011: England 16-12 Scotland", in BBC Sport:
        England were shipping penalties at an alarming rate - five in the first 15 minutes alone - and with Wilkinson missing three long-distance pots of his own in the first 20 minutes, the alarm bells began to ring for Martin Johnson's men.
    14. (chiefly East Midlands , Yorkshire ) A plaster cast.
    15. (historical ) Alternative form of pott : a former size of paper, ×ばつ 15 inches.
    Usage notes
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    • Whether a saucepan is a type of pot, a type of pan, or neither, depends on the speaker's taxonomy of cookware. There are three competing ways of drawing distinctions, all widespread: (1) pots and pans are distinguished by their depth and use, in which case a saucepan is actually a pot despite its name, (2) pots and pans are distinguished by type and/or number of handles, in which case a saucepan is in fact a pan, and (3) both vessel depth and handles are distinguishing features, in which case saucepans form a separate third class that is sibling to pots and pans. Scheme (1) is most widespread in the US and US-influenced parts of Canada, whereas (2) is more typical of the UK and Commonwealth countries; (3) does not split as cleanly along these regional lines.
    • Due to their typical shallowness, sauciers may be considered pans, not pots, even by those who label saucepans as pots.
    Derived terms
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    Translations
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    vessel for cooking or storing food etc.
    vessel used to hold soil for growing plants see flowerpot,‎ plant pot
    unit of volume notionally equivalent to the capacity of a pot
    money wagered
    favourite horse
    trap for crabs and other seafood
    iron hat
    glass of beer
    potshot see potshot
    protruding belly
    ruin or deterioration
    cue sports: act of causing a ball to fall into a pocket
    rail transport: non-conducting stand that supports the third rail
    earthen or pewter cup for liquors; mug
    extension of a flue
    crucible see crucible
    perforated cask for draining sugar
    size of paper see pott
    slang: toilet
    plaster cast see plaster cast
    coffee pot, teapot
    vessel for cooking pig feeds
    See also
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    Verb

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    pot (third-person singular simple present pots , present participle potting , simple past and past participle potted )

    1. To put (something) into a pot.
      to pot a plant
    2. To preserve by bottling or canning.
      potted meat
    3. (electronics ) To package a circuit by encasing it in resin.
      English Wikipedia has an article on:
      Wikipedia
    4. (snooker , pool, billiards , transitive ) To cause a ball to fall into a pocket.
    5. (snooker , pool, billiards , intransitive ) To be capable of being potted.
      The black ball doesn't pot; the red is in the way.
    6. (transitive , slang ) To shoot with a firearm.
      • 1897, Encyclopaedia of Sport:
        When hunted, it [the jaguar] takes refuge in trees, and this habit is well known to hunters, who pursue it with dogs and pot it when treed.
      • 2005, John Wilcox, The Road To Kandahar:
        Luckily Jenkins — our best shot — was on guard and spotted him and... er... potted him, as I said. Buried him in a shallow grave below stones, so it's unlikely he will be found.
    7. (intransitive , dated , slang ) To take a potshot, or haphazard shot, with a firearm.
    8. (transitive , colloquial ) To secure; gain; win; bag.
    9. (UK ) To send someone to jail, expeditiously.
    10. (obsolete , dialect , UK ) To tipple; to drink.
      • 1623, Owen Feltham, Resolves: Divine, Moral, Political:
        It is less labour to plough than to pot it.
    11. (transitive ) To drain (e.g. sugar of the molasses) in a perforated cask.
      • 1793, Bryan Edwards, History, Civil and Commercial, of the British Colonies in the West Indies:
        Too much temper likewise prevents the melasses from separating from the sugar when it is potted or put into the hogshead
    12. (transitive , UK ) To seat a person, usually a young child, on a potty or toilet, typically during toilet teaching.
      • 1975, Nancie R. Finnie, Handling the Young Cerebral Palsied Child, →ISBN, page 75:
        Ideally the best Ideally the best way of tackling the problem of toilet training, is to 'pot' your child at set intervals when he is at home, even though he may no longer be a baby, thus establishing a regular routine instead of one at odd intervals.
      • 1978, Penelope Leach, Your Baby & Child from Birth to Age Five, →ISBN, page 225:
        If you leave out this "catching" stage altogether and start proper toilet training at, say, eighteen months you will only have to pot your baby about 2000 times for the same effect.
      • 2004, Joan Gomez, Coping with Incontinence, →ISBN, page 33:
        Do not make the mistake of potting your baby as early as possible, but wait until she gives the signal that she is aware that puddles are somehow to do with her.
      • 2012, Nanny Smith, Nina Grunfeld, Nanny Knows Best: Successful Potty Training, →ISBN:
        Of course, if at any stage your child takes a violent dislike to the pot, then I would put it away for a few weeks and then try again, but if the pot is very comfortable, your attitude is calm and you don't over-pot your child (put him on the pot too often or talk about the pot too much), this shouldn't happen.
    13. (chiefly East Midlands ) To apply a plaster cast to a broken limb.
    14. To catch (a fish, eel, etc) via a pot .
      • 1986, Carolyn Ellis, Fisher Folk: Two Communities on Chesapeake Bay, University Press of Kentucky, →ISBN, page 77:
        Most Fishneck watermen oystered in winter, using the same small skiffs from which they potted crabs in summer.
      • 1994, The Dukes County Intelligencer, volumes 36-37, page 131:
        Potting Eels: Except for the mature neshaws, Vineyard eels were potted (caught by pots) in September and October. [...] When eeling was good, each pot would catch 25 to 100 pounds of neshaws; some pots would be filled to capacity.
    15. (rugby , transitive ) To score (a drop goal).
      • 1967, Arthur H. Carman, Ranfurly Shield Rugby, page 139:
        With five minutes to go, Trevathan potted his second goal, and finally it was the fullback Taylor who scored.
      • 1998, Geoffrey Serle: In Tribute, page 20:
        He played for the Oxford Australians against their Cambridge counterparts, and even potted a few goals at picnic Rugby matches.
    Derived terms
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    Translations
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    put (something) into a pot
    preserve
    cause a ball to fall into a pocket
    cue sports: be capable of being potted
    shoot with a firearm
    take a pot shot
    secure; gain; win; bag
    send someone to jail expeditiously
    tipple; drink
    drain
    seat a child onto a potty
    apply a plaster cast
    The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
    Translations to be checked

    Etymology 2

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      Possibly a shortened form of Mexican Spanish potiguaya or potaguaya ("cannabis leaves"), or potación de guaya (literally "drink of grief"), supposedly denoting a drink of wine or brandy in which marijuana buds were steeped, from pota +‎ de +‎ guaya (see guayar ("to lament")).

      Noun

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      pot (uncountable )

      1. (slang , uncountable ) Marijuana .
        Synonyms: see Thesaurus:marijuana
        • 1968 July, Shel Silverstein, "Silverstein's Hippies", in Playboy Magazine, page 189:
          The way we figure it, ma'am, if everybody walked around naked, smoked pot and listened to rock'n'roll, there wouldn't be any more wars!
      Derived terms
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      Translations
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      marijuana

      Further reading

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      • Ernest L. Abel (1982), "Pot", in A Marihuana Dictionary: Words, Terms, Events, and Persons Relating to Cannabis, Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, →ISBN, pages 80–81

      Etymology 3

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      English Wikipedia has an article on:
      Wikipedia

        Clipping of potentiometer .

        Noun

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        pot (plural pots )

        1. (slang , electronics ) A simple electromechanical device used to control resistance or voltage (often to adjust sound volume) in an electronic device by rotating or sliding when manipulated by a human thumb, screwdriver, etc.
        Derived terms
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        • slide pot (a sliding (linear) potentiometer typically designed to be manipulated by a thumb or finger)
        • thumb pot (a rotating potentiometer designed to be turned by a thumb or finger)

        Verb

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        pot (third-person singular simple present pots , present participle potting , simple past and past participle potted )

        1. (slang , broadcasting ) To fade volume in or out by means of a potentiometer.
          • 1999, A Broadcast Engineering Tutorial for Non-engineers, page 23:
            While the announcer is talking, the select switch on the mixing board for the microphone input is selected, and the microphone is "potted up."

        Etymology 4

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        Etymology tree
        Latin pōtiō der.
        Old French pocion bor.
        Middle English pocioun
        English potion clip.
        English pot

          Clipping of potion .

          Noun

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          pot (plural pots )

          1. (roleplaying games , video games ) Clipping of potion .

          References

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          Anagrams

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          Achang

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          Pronunciation

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          • (Myanmar) /pɔt˧/

          Verb

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          pot

          1. to train, teach

          Further reading

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          • Inglis, Douglas; Sampu, Nasaw; Jaseng, Wilai; Jana, Thocha (2005), A preliminary Ngochang–Kachin–English Lexicon[2] , Payap University, page 109

          Afrikaans

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          Etymology

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          From Dutch pot , from Middle Dutch pot .

          Pronunciation

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          Noun

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          pot (plural potte )

          1. pot ; jar

          Albanian

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          Etymology

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          From Romance *pottus ("pot").

          Noun

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          pot m (plural pota , definite poti , definite plural potat )

          1. mill-hopper, flower-bin
          2. little boy
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          Aromanian

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          Alternative forms

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          Etymology

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          From a Vulgar Latin *pot(e)o , analogical replacement for possō , regularization of Latin possum . Compare Romanian pot , putea .

          Verb

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          pot (third-person singular poati or poate , participle pututã )

          1. can, could, to be able to
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          Basque

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          Pronunciation

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          Noun

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          pot inan

          1. kiss

          Catalan

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          Pronunciation

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          Request for audio pronunciation This entry needs an audio pronunciation. If you are a native speaker with a microphone, please record this word. The recorded pronunciation will appear here when it's ready.

          Etymology 1

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          Inherited from Vulgar Latin pottum , pottus ("pot, jar"), from Frankish *pott , from Proto-Germanic *puttaz ("pot"), from Proto-Indo-European *budnós ("a type of vessel").

          Cognate with French pot , English pot , Saterland Frisian Pot , Dutch pot , German Low German Pott , German Pott , Swedish potta ("chamber pot"), Icelandic pottur ("tub, pot"), Old Armenian պոյտն (poytn, "pot, earthen pot").

          Noun

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          pot m (plural pots )

          1. jar, canister, vessel
          2. jackpot
          Derived terms
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          Etymology 2

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          Verb

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          pot

          1. third-person singular present indicative of poder

          Czech

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          Czech Wikipedia has an article on:
          Wikipedia cs

          Etymology

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          Inherited from Old Czech pot , from Proto-Slavic *potъ ("sweat").

          Pronunciation

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          Noun

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          pot m inan

          1. sweat

          Declension

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          Declension of pot (hard masculine inanimate)
          singular plural
          nominative pot poty
          genitive potu potů
          dative potu potům
          accusative pot poty
          vocative pote poty
          locative potu potech
          instrumental potem poty
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          Further reading

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          Dutch

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          Pronunciation

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          Etymology 1

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          From Middle Dutch pot , from Old Dutch *pot , from Frankish *pott , from Proto-Germanic *puttaz ("pot"). Cognate with German Pott and English pot ("pot").

          Noun

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          pot m (plural potten , diminutive potje  n)

          1. jar, pot , solid container
          2. (Belgium ) cooking pot
            Synonym: kookpot
          3. kitty or pool (where stakes, etc., are centralized)
          4. (Netherlands , vulgar ) loo, crapper (toilet)
            Synonym: toiletpot
          Derived terms
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          Descendants
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          • Afrikaans: pot
          • Berbice Creole Dutch: poto
          • Negerhollands: pot , put , potji
            • Virgin Islands Creole: poty
          • Papiamentu: pòchi (from the diminutive)
          • Petjo: pot
          • Caribbean Javanese: pot
          • Indonesian: pot , poci (from the diminutive)

          Etymology 2

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          Clipping of lollepot .

          Noun

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          pot f (plural potten , diminutive potje  n)

          1. (derogatory ) dyke (lesbian)
            Synonyms: lesbienne , lesbo , lesbi
          Derived terms
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          Etymology 3

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          See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

          Verb

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          pot

          1. inflection of potten :
            1. first /second /third-person singular present indicative
            2. imperative

          Anagrams

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          Further reading

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          • "pot" in Woordenlijst Nederlandse Taal – Officiële Spelling, Nederlandse Taalunie. [the official spelling word list for the Dutch language]

          French

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          Etymology 1

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          Inherited from Middle French pot , from Old French pot ("pot"), from Vulgar Latin pottum , pottus ("pot, jar"), from Frankish *pott , from Proto-Germanic *puttaz ("pot, jar, tub"), from Proto-Indo-European *budn- ("a kind of vessel"). More at English pot .

          Pronunciation

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          Noun

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          pot m (plural pots )

          1. pot , jar, vase, tin, can, carton (a container of any of various materials)
            (with à indicates intended use): pot à épices — spice jar
            (with de indicates either actual/current use...): pot d’eauvase of water
            (...or material): pot de verre — (glass) jar
          2. cooking pot (any vessel used to cook food)
          3. (cooking ) dish
          4. (childish ) potty (the pot used when toilet-training children)
          5. (colloquial ) drink, jar, bevvy (alcoholic beverage)
          6. (colloquial ) do (UK), bash, drinks party (a small, informal party or celebration)
          7. (card games ) pot , kitty, pool (money staked at cards, etc.)
          8. (informal ) luck (success; chance occurrence, especially when favourable)
          9. (wine ) a half-litre bottle or measure of wine
          10. a pre-metric unit of measure, equivalent to 1.5 litres
          11. a paper size, about 40 by 31 cm
          12. (slang , vulgar ) arse, ass (the buttocks)
          Derived terms
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          Etymology 2

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            Borrowed from English pot .

            Pronunciation

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            Noun

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            pot m (uncountable )

            1. (North America ) pot , weed (cannabis, marijuana)

            References

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            • Nouveau Petit Larousse illustré. Dictionnaire encyclopédique. Paris, Librairie Larousse, 1952, 146th edition

            Further reading

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            Indonesian

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            Pronunciation

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            Etymology 1

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            Borrowed from Dutch pot , from Middle Dutch pot , from Proto-Germanic *puttaz ("pot"). Doublet of poci .

            Noun

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            pot (plural pot-pot)

            1. pot (a vessel used to hold soil for growing plants)
            2. ellipsis of pispot
            Derived terms
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            Etymology 2

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            Borrowed from Javanese [Term?] ("a certain game of marbles", literally "pot").

            Noun

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            pot (plural pot-pot)

            1. a variation of the marble game, played by at least two people, using a triangular image as a place for the marbles being bet on, played by the players

            Further reading

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            Megleno-Romanian

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            Etymology

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            From Vulgar Latin *pot(e)o , analogical replacement of posso, potere , from Latin possum . Compare Aromanian pot , Romanian putea, pot .

            Verb

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            pot

            1. I can, am able to.
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            Middle Dutch

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            Etymology

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            From Old Dutch *pot , from Frankish *pott , from Proto-Germanic *puttaz ("pot").

            Noun

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            pot m

            1. pot , jar
            2. can, jug

            Inflection

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            Strong masculine noun
            singular plural
            nominative pot potte
            accusative pot potte
            genitive pots potte
            dative potte potten

            Descendants

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            • Dutch: pot
              • Afrikaans: pot
              • Berbice Creole Dutch: poto
              • Negerhollands: pot , put , potji
                • Virgin Islands Creole: poty
              • Papiamentu: pòchi (from the diminutive)
              • Petjo: pot
              • Caribbean Javanese: pot
              • Indonesian: pot , poci (from the diminutive)
            • Limburgish: pót

            Further reading

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            Middle English

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            Alternative forms

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            Etymology

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              From Old English pott and Old French pot , both ultimately from Proto-Germanic *puttaz , from Proto-Indo-European *budnós .

              Pronunciation

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              Noun

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              pot (plural pottes )

              1. A pot ; a circular receptacle or vessel:
                1. A cookpot (a pot used for cooking in)
                2. A pot used for storing substances (especially food or water)
                3. A pot used for ladling or serving liquids; a beaker.
                4. A measurement for the quantity of liquids.
                5. A pot of a certain material or manufacture:
                  1. A ceramic pot or vessel.
                  2. A pot or vessel made out of metal.
              2. (rare ) The top of the skull.
              3. (rare ) A shard of earthen material.
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              Descendants

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              References

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              Norman

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              Etymology

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              From Old French pot ("pot"), from Vulgar Latin pottum , pottus ("pot, jar"), from Frankish *pott , from Proto-Germanic *puttaz ("pot, jar, tub"), from Proto-Indo-European *budn- ("a kind of vessel").

              Noun

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              pot m (plural pots )

              1. (Jersey ) pot
                • 1903, Edgar MacCulloch, "Proverbs, Weather Sayings, etc.", in Guernsey Folk Lore[3] , pages 530-31:
                  Février dit à Janvier:—'Si j'étais à votre pièche je f'rais gelaïr le pots sus le faeu et les p'tits éfàns aux seins de leurs mères'—et pour son ìmpudence i' fut raccourchi de daeux jours, et Janvier fut aloigni.
                  February said to January:—If I were in your place I would cause the pots to freeze on the fire, and babes at their mothers' breasts—and for his insolence he was shortened of two days, and January was lengthened.

              Derived terms

              [edit ]

              Old English

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              Pronunciation

              [edit ]

              Noun

              [edit ]

              pot m

              1. alternative form of pott

              Old French

              [edit ]

              Etymology 1

              [edit ]

                From Vulgar Latin pottum , pottus ("pot, jar"), from Frankish *pott , from Proto-Germanic *puttaz ("pot, jar, tub"), from Proto-Indo-European *budn- ("a kind of vessel"). More at pot .

                Noun

                [edit ]

                pot oblique singularm (oblique plural poz or potz , nominative singular poz or potz , nominative plural pot)

                1. pot (storage/cooking vessel)
                Descendants
                [edit ]

                References

                [edit ]

                Etymology 2

                [edit ]

                see poeir .

                Verb

                [edit ]

                pot

                1. third-person singular present indicative of poeir
                Descendants
                [edit ]

                Polish

                [edit ]
                Polish Wikipedia has an article on:
                Wikipedia pl

                Etymology

                [edit ]
                Etymology tree
                Proto-Indo-European *pekw-
                Proto-Indo-European *-tós
                Proto-Indo-European *pokwtós
                Proto-Balto-Slavic *paktás
                Proto-Slavic *pȍtъ
                Polish pot

                  Inherited from Proto-Slavic *pȍtъ .

                  Pronunciation

                  [edit ]

                  Noun

                  [edit ]

                  pot m inan

                  1. sweat

                  Declension

                  [edit ]
                  Declension of pot
                  singular plural
                  nominative pot poty
                  genitive potu potów
                  dative potowi potom
                  accusative pot poty
                  instrumental potem potami
                  locative pocie potach
                  vocative pocie poty

                  Derived terms

                  [edit ]
                  verbs

                  Further reading

                  [edit ]
                  • "pot", in Wielki słownik języka polskiego[4] (in Polish), Instytut Języka Polskiego PAN
                  • "pot", in Polish dictionaries at PWN[5] (in Polish)

                  Romanian

                  [edit ]

                  Pronunciation

                  [edit ]

                  Etymology 1

                  [edit ]

                  Borrowed from French pot .

                  Noun

                  [edit ]

                  pot n (plural poturi )

                  1. (card games ) pot
                  Declension
                  [edit ]
                  singular plural
                  indefinite definite indefinite definite
                  nominative-accusative pot potul poturi poturile
                  genitive-dative pot potului poturi poturilor
                  vocative potule poturilor

                  Etymology 2

                  [edit ]

                  Verb

                  [edit ]

                  pot

                  1. first-person singular present indicative of putea
                    te pot vedea, prostule.I can see you, idiot.
                  2. first-person singular present subjunctive of putea
                    am să pot merg cu tine mâine dimineață I'll be able to go with you tomorrow morning.
                  3. third-person plural present indicative of putea
                    calmează-te, nu pot -ți străbată gândul.calm down, they can't read your mind.

                  Serbo-Croatian

                  [edit ]

                  Etymology

                  [edit ]

                  Inherited from Proto-Slavic *potъ . First attested in the 16th century.

                  Noun

                  [edit ]

                  pȍt m inan (Cyrillic spelling по̏т )

                  1. (regional ) sweat
                    Synonym: znȏj

                  Slovene

                  [edit ]

                  Etymology 1

                  [edit ]

                  From Proto-Slavic *pǫtь , from Proto-Balto-Slavic *pántis , from Proto-Indo-European *póntoh1s .

                  Pronunciation

                  [edit ]

                  Noun

                  [edit ]

                  pọ́t f or m inan or m anim

                  1. (inanimate ) way, path
                    Synonym: potka
                  2. (inanimate ) trip, journey
                    Synonyms: potovanje , cestovanje , popotovanje , rajža , vandranje
                    Pot je trajala več dni.The trip lasted for multiple days.
                  3. (inanimate , physics ) distance
                  4. (inanimate ) way (method or manner)
                    Synonyms: način , postopek , pristop
                  5. (inanimate ) career (general course of action or conduct in life)
                    Synonym: kariera
                  6. (animate , obsolete , only masculine ) messenger
                    Synonyms: brzotek , glasnik , kurir , sel , novičar , poročnik
                  7. (animate , historical , only masculine ) a mediator who buys things in other towns on demand
                    Synonym: potovec
                  8. (inanimate , rare ) time (instance or occurrence)
                    Synonyms: bart , -krat
                  Usage notes
                  [edit ]

                  The masculine gender is nowadays obsolete, except in some collocations, e.g. križev pot . For animate senses, however, it is the only possible gender.

                  Declension
                  [edit ]
                  The template Template:sl-infl-noun does not use the parameter(s):
                  accsg=pọ̄t
                  Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.


                  • usual for inanimate senses, except for sense 'career' (but still possible)
                  Second feminine declension (i-stem) , long mixed accent, can also be acute in the nominative and accusative singular
                  nom. sing. pọ̄t
                  gen. sing. potȋ
                  singular dual plural
                  nominative
                  imenovȃlnik
                  pọ̄t potȋ potȋ
                  genitive
                  rodȋlnik
                  potȋ potī potī
                  dative
                  dajȃlnik
                  pọ́ti potẹ̄ma potẹ̄m
                  accusative
                  tožȋlnik
                  pọ̑t potȋ potȋ
                  locative
                  mẹ̑stnik
                  pọ́ti potẹ́h potẹ́h
                  instrumental
                  orọ̑dnik
                  potjọ́ , pọ̑tjo +prep. potẹ̄ma potmí
                  (vocative)
                  (ogȏvorni imenovȃlnik )
                  pọ̑t potȋ potȋ
                  The template Template:sl-infl-noun does not use the parameter(s):
                  accsg=pọ̄t
                  Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.


                  • stylistically marked for most inanimate senses, but more common for sense 'career'
                  Second feminine declension (i-stem) , long mixed accent, can also be acute in the nominative and accusative singular, neuter in dual and plural following the first declension
                  nom. sing. pọ̄t
                  gen. sing. potȋ
                  singular dual plural
                  nominative
                  imenovȃlnik
                  pọ̄t pọ̑ti pọ̑ta
                  genitive
                  rodȋlnik
                  potȋ potī , pọ̑tov potī , pọ̑tov
                  dative
                  dajȃlnik
                  pọ́ti pọ̑toma , pọ̑tama pọ̑tom , pọ̑tam
                  accusative
                  tožȋlnik
                  pọ̑t pọ̑ti pọ̑ta
                  locative
                  mẹ̑stnik
                  pọ́ti pọ̑tih pọ̑tih
                  instrumental
                  orọ̑dnik
                  potjọ́ , pọ̑tjo +prep. pọ̑toma , pọ̑tama pọ̑ti
                  (vocative)
                  (ogȏvorni imenovȃlnik )
                  pọ̑t pọ̑ti pọ̑ta



                  • inanimate senses, obsolete
                  First masculine declension (hard o-stem, inanimate) , fixed accent, can also be acute in the nominative and accusative singular, neuter in dual and plural following the first declension
                  nom. sing. pọ́t
                  gen. sing. pọ́ta
                  singular dual plural
                  nominative
                  imenovȃlnik
                  pọ́t pọ̑ti pọ̑ta
                  genitive
                  rodȋlnik
                  pọ́ta potī , pọ̑tov potī , pọ̑tov
                  dative
                  dajȃlnik
                  pọ́tu , pọ́ti pọ̑toma , pọ̑tama pọ̑tom , pọ̑tam
                  accusative
                  tožȋlnik
                  pọ́t pọ̑ti pọ̑ta
                  locative
                  mẹ̑stnik
                  pọ́tu , pọ́ti pọ̑tih pọ̑tih
                  instrumental
                  orọ̑dnik
                  pọ́tom pọ̑toma , pọ̑tama pọ̑ti
                  (vocative)
                  (ogȏvorni imenovȃlnik )
                  pọ̑t pọ̑ti pọ̑ta



                  • inanimate senses, obsolete
                  First masculine declension (hard o-stem, inanimate) , fixed accent
                  nom. sing. pọ́t
                  gen. sing. pọ́ta
                  singular dual plural
                  nominative
                  imenovȃlnik
                  pọ́t pọ́ta pọ́ti
                  genitive
                  rodȋlnik
                  pọ́ta pọ̄tov pọ̄tov
                  dative
                  dajȃlnik
                  pọ́tu , pọ́ti pọ́toma , pọ́tama pọ́tom , pọ́tam
                  accusative
                  tožȋlnik
                  pọ́t pọ́ta pọ́te
                  locative
                  mẹ̑stnik
                  pọ́tu , pọ́ti pọ̄tih , pọ̄tah pọ̄tih , pọ̄tah
                  instrumental
                  orọ̑dnik
                  pọ́tom pọ́toma , pọ́tama pọ̄ti
                  (vocative)
                  (ogȏvorni imenovȃlnik )
                  pọ̑t pọ̑ta pọ̑ti



                  • animate senses
                  First masculine declension (hard o-stem, animate) , fixed accent
                  nom. sing. pọ́t
                  gen. sing. pọ́ta
                  singular dual plural
                  nominative
                  imenovȃlnik
                  pọ́t pọ́ta pọ́ti
                  genitive
                  rodȋlnik
                  pọ́ta pọ̄tov pọ̄tov
                  dative
                  dajȃlnik
                  pọ́tu , pọ́ti pọ́toma , pọ́tama pọ́tom , pọ́tam
                  accusative
                  tožȋlnik
                  pọ́ta pọ́ta pọ́te
                  locative
                  mẹ̑stnik
                  pọ́tu , pọ́ti pọ̄tih , pọ̄tah pọ̄tih , pọ̄tah
                  instrumental
                  orọ̑dnik
                  pọ́tom pọ́toma , pọ́tama pọ̄ti
                  (vocative)
                  (ogȏvorni imenovȃlnik )
                  pọ̑t pọ̑ta pọ̑ti


                  Derived terms
                  [edit ]

                  Etymology 2

                  [edit ]

                  From Proto-Slavic *potъ , from Proto-Balto-Slavic *paktás , from Proto-Indo-European *pokwtós .

                  Pronunciation

                  [edit ]

                  Noun

                  [edit ]

                  pọ̑t m inan

                  1. sweat
                    Synonyms: znoj , rosa
                  Declension
                  [edit ]
                  First masculine declension (hard o-stem, inanimate) , long mixed accent, ending -u in genitive singular (singularia tantum)
                  nom. sing. pọ̑t
                  gen. sing. potȗ
                  singular
                  nominative
                  imenovȃlnik
                  pọ̑t
                  genitive
                  rodȋlnik
                  potȗ
                  dative
                  dajȃlnik
                  pọ̑tu , pọ̑ti
                  accusative
                  tožȋlnik
                  pọ̑t
                  locative
                  mẹ̑stnik
                  pọ̑tu , pọ̑ti
                  instrumental
                  orọ̑dnik
                  pọ̑tom
                  (vocative)
                  (ogȏvorni imenovȃlnik )
                  pọ̑t



                  First masculine declension (hard o-stem, inanimate) , fixed accent (singularia tantum)
                  nom. sing. pọ̑t
                  gen. sing. pọ̑ta
                  singular
                  nominative
                  imenovȃlnik
                  pọ̑t
                  genitive
                  rodȋlnik
                  pọ̑ta
                  dative
                  dajȃlnik
                  pọ̑tu , pọ̑ti
                  accusative
                  tožȋlnik
                  pọ̑t
                  locative
                  mẹ̑stnik
                  pọ̑tu , pọ̑ti
                  instrumental
                  orọ̑dnik
                  pọ̑tom
                  (vocative)
                  (ogȏvorni imenovȃlnik )
                  pọ̑t


                  Derived terms
                  [edit ]

                  See also

                  [edit ]

                  Further reading

                  [edit ]
                  • "pot", in Slovarji Inštituta za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša ZRC SAZU, portal Fran
                  • "pot", in Termania, Amebis
                  • See also the general references

                  Tatar

                  [edit ]

                  Noun

                  [edit ]

                  pot

                  1. (archaic ) A unit of volume: 1 pot, the volume of 16 kg of water
                  2. (archaic ) A unit of weight: 1 pot = 40 qadaq = 16.380 kg

                  Declension

                  [edit ]
                  Declension of pot
                  nominative pot
                  genitive potnıñ
                  dative potqa
                  accusative potnı
                  locative potta
                  ablative pottan

                  See also

                  [edit ]

                  Tok Pisin

                  [edit ]

                  Etymology

                  [edit ]

                  From English port .

                  Noun

                  [edit ]

                  pot

                  1. port

                  Welsh

                  [edit ]

                  Pronunciation

                  [edit ]

                  Etymology 1

                  [edit ]

                  Borrowed from Middle Welsh pot .

                  Noun

                  [edit ]

                  pot m (plural potiau or potau , diminutive potyn )

                  1. pot , jar
                    Synonyms: llestr , jar
                  Derived terms
                  [edit ]

                  Etymology 2

                  [edit ]

                  Borrowed from English pot , from Spanish potiguaya or potaguaya ("cannabis leaves").

                  Noun

                  [edit ]

                  pot m (uncountable )

                  1. pot , cannabis
                    Synonyms: mariwana , canabis , cywarch
                  Derived terms
                  [edit ]

                  Etymology 3

                  [edit ]

                  Adjective

                  [edit ]

                  pot f

                  1. feminine singular of pwt ("tiny, short, puny")

                  Further reading

                  [edit ]
                  • Griffiths, Bruce; Glyn Jones, Dafydd (1995), "jar", in Geiriadur yr Academi: The Welsh Academy English–Welsh Dictionary[6] , Cardiff: University of Wales Press, →ISBN
                  • Griffiths, Bruce; Glyn Jones, Dafydd (1995), "pot", in Geiriadur yr Academi: The Welsh Academy English–Welsh Dictionary[7] , Cardiff: University of Wales Press, →ISBN
                  • D. G. Lewis, N. Lewis, editors (2005–present), "pot", in Gweiadur: the Welsh–English Dictionary, Gwerin
                  • R. J. Thomas, G. A. Bevan, P. J. Donovan, A. Hawke, et al., editors (1950–present), "pot", in Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru Online (in Welsh), University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies

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