puki
English
Noun
puki (plural pukis)
- A bowl or other dish used by Native Americans in the Southwest as a mold when making pots.
- 2007, Suzanne J. E. Tourtillott, The Figure in Clay, →ISBN, page 80:
- First, I made a puki, a tool used by Native Americans to form a pinch pot. Typically, a puki is a shallow, fired bowl used to keep the bottom of the pinch pot round while holding the entire pot in shape.
- 2004, Susan Ware, Notable American Women, →ISBN, page 418:
- She began a pot by forming a pancake of clay between her palms and laying it in a bowl-like vessel which was the bottom of a broken pot, called a puki.
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- Any form or mold used for making clay pots by hand.
- 2012, Jo-Ann Mapson, Finding Casey, →ISBN, page 268:
- Like I showed you, the clay goes into the puki, coil by coil.
- 2008, Deborah Morgenthal & Suzanne J. E. Tourtillott, The Penland Book of Ceramics, →ISBN, page 13:
- I begin by pinching a base or rolling out a slab that I place in a plaster form, or puki, for support..
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Cebuano
Etymology
From Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *puki, from Proto-Austronesian *puki.
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: pu‧ki
Noun
puki
- the female genitalia; the vulva or vagina
- the tiger cowrie (Cypraea tigris)
- the boatlily (Tradescantia spathacea)
Malay
Etymology
From Proto-Malayic *puki, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *puki, from Proto-Austronesian *puki.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /puki/
- Rhymes: -uki, -ki, -i
Tagalog
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *puki, from Proto-Austronesian *puki.
Synonyms
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