An earthenware cooking pot used for cooking over direct heat from coals or a wood fire.
1Before it stood a pipkin, in which something was evidently kept warm.
2Godfrey knew not how to replace the vulgar pipkin, whose use is universal.
3Why, the pipkin was about as much as you could manage.
4As if I could drink the worth of any pipkin at a draft!
5The Swineherd got the kisses, and she got the pipkin.
6The drops fell into a small earthen pipkin placed on the deck beneath it.
7We call him the Sun and Moon, and you call him an 'earthen pipkin.'
8One force drew the chip in the pipkin and the ship over the tranced sea.
9I remembered what old Lord Steyne had said to Becky: You poor little earthen pipkin.
10But, unfortunately for him, he was the 'earthen pipkin' which the 'iron pot' found inconvenient.
11Tom himself was stirring something in a pipkin over the gas stove when Erica came in.
12The spilt water from the pipkin had dried, and the pipkin was not to be seen.
13A little girl that hath broke her pipkin.
14Notwithstanding these admonitions, she did eat sixteen quarters, two bushels, three pecks and a pipkin full.
15There floated down from some rotten rope up aloft a flake of scurf, that settled in the pipkin.
16You poor little earthenware pipkin, you want to swim down the stream along with the great copper kettles.