castiron
English
Adjective
castiron (comparative more castiron, superlative most castiron)
- Alternative spelling of cast iron
- 1974, Hjalmar Thesan, Country Days: Chronicles of Knysna & the Southern Cape, David Philip (1974), →ISBN, page 35:
- Camped around its base and sleeping in a primitive 'skerm' of branches at night, with a bubbling castiron pot over a permanent fire, they would chip away until the great tree was down.
- 1986, Donald Hall, The Happy Man: Poems, Random House (1986), →ISBN, page 21:
- we add wood to the castiron stove, and midnight's
- candlelight trembles on the ceiling
- 1999, Ken Hodgson, The Hell Benders, Pinnacle Books (1999), →ISBN, page 139:
- A large, castiron pot of beef stew was slowly simmering.
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:castiron.
- 1974, Hjalmar Thesan, Country Days: Chronicles of Knysna & the Southern Cape, David Philip (1974), →ISBN, page 35:
Noun
castiron (uncountable)
- Alternative spelling of cast iron
- 1989, Popular Science, November 1989, page 133 (advertisement):
- Build low-cost safe furnace to melt aluminum, brass, even 20 pounds of castiron!
- 1991, Robin Clark, Divina Trace, Robin Clark (1991), →ISBN, page 115:
- (Of course, they ain't no churchveil in the world could withstand the bruising of a history like the one oldman Salizar and that Mother Maurina gave me later – unless of course it make from castiron – but fortunately enough I haven't heard of none of that nonsense yet.)
- 1995, Paul Jackson, Smoking Allowed: A Pictorial Past of Honey Bee Smokers in the United States, A.I. Root Company (1995), →ISBN, page 14:
- The brackets attaching the fire chamber to the bellows are made from castiron.
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:castiron.
- 1989, Popular Science, November 1989, page 133 (advertisement):
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