
1) Baked clay 2) Ceramic ware 3) Clay 4) Clay pottery 5) Clay-baked pottery 6) Exclusively Saxon word 7) Exclusively Anglo word 8) Ironstone china 9) Items of pottery 10) Pottery 11) Pottery made from clay 12) Some ceramic pottery 13) Some ceramics 14) Something fired 15) Stoneware 16) Terracotta 17) Word with Anglo-Saxon origins
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https://www.crosswordclues.com/clue/earthenware

1) Ceramic 2) Crockery 3) Delft 4) Faience 5) Maiolica 6) Majolica
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https://www.crosswordclues.com/clue/earthenware

Earthenware is the general term for pottery that is not porcelain or some other specific types such as fritware or stoneware. It is, or can be, fired at relatively low temperatures and vitrification does not take place, leaving the body (if not glazed) slightly porous. Until porcelain became very widely used in the modern period, the great majorit...
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthenware

Ceramics made of opaque, slightly porous clay that is fired at a relatively low heat.
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http://sitescorcher.com/spoorstone/glossary.html

• (n.) Vessels and other utensils, ornaments, or the like, made of baked clay. See Crockery, Pottery, Stoneware, and Porcelain.
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http://thinkexist.com/dictionary/meaning/earthenware/

A product made form clay that is only fired to the paint at which the particles form a single mass but do not vitrify into a glassy, impermeable substance. The resulting body is porous and a glaze is required to make it waterproof. Becasuse of the low firing temperatures glazes earthenware can take a wide range of metal oxide colouring agents and i...
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http://www.antique-marks.com/antique-terms-e.html

pottery that has not been fired to the point of vitrification and is thus slightly porous and coarser than stoneware and porcelain. The body can be ... [10 related articles]
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/e/2

Pottery made of porous clay and fired at relatively low temperatures of up to 1,200°C/2,200°F. It does not vitrify but remains porous, so will continue to absorb fluids. Earthenware may be unglazed...
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20688
Earth'en·ware` noun Vessels and other utensils, ornaments, or the like, made of baked clay. See
Crockery ,
Pottery ,
Stoneware , and
Porcelain .
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/E/3

dishes made of baked clayÂ
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http://www.graduateshotline.com/list.html

Ceramic ware, usually coarse and reddish in color, fired in the lowest temperature ranges. Used for domestic ware, glazed or unglazed.
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http://www.modernsculpture.com/glossary.htm

Ceramic ware made from clay fired in the kiln at the lowest temperature ranges.
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http://www.redraggallery.co.uk/art-glossary.html

Pots that are porous when unglazed. Usually fired at low temperatures. Earthenware is softer and more easily damaged than stoneware.
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http://www.studiopottery.com/cgi-bin/glossary.cgi

A low firing natural clay body usually red or brown when fired to maturity, non-vitreous and porous with comparatively coarse grain structure and low chipping resistance.oft, porous, glazed pottery fired to a temperature of 1000-1100°C.
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https://ashbrook-ceramics.co.uk/pottery-glossary/

A moderately porous pottery body that is fired to a temperature somewhat below that required to produce a vitreous article. Typically 1060 to 1100 C
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https://walkerceramics.com.au/resources/glossary-of-ceramic-terms/

Clay bodies fired at temperatures below cone 1 (2110° F) that remain somewhat porous and open in structure. The vast majority of the world's pottery has been earthenware because of the wide prevalence of earthenware clays and the relative ease of reaching the kiln temperature necessary to mature the claybody. Two examples are terra cotta and white...
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https://www.bathpotters.co.uk/helpful-guides/94-pottery-glossary

low-fire pottery (below cone 03), usually red or tan in color with an absorbency to from 5 to 20 percent.
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https://www.cerritos.edu/ceramics/art150/glossaryofterms.htm

Porous ware, lower fired ware usually under 1200°C and the clay and glazes that it is made from. Earthenware is usually characterised by brighter colours, softer glazes and separate glaze layer over the body.
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https://www.cromartiehobbycraft.co.uk/AdditionalDepartments/Footer-Content/

A low fired form of pottery (porous clay bodies) which are fired to maturity at approx. 1100°C.
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https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20487
noun ceramic ware made of porous clay fired at low heat
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https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20974

Pottery made of porous clay and fired at relatively low temperatures of up to 1,200°C/2,200°F. It does not vitrify but remains porous, so will continue to absorb fluids. Earthenware may be unglazed (terracotta flowerpots, wine-coolers) or glazed to give a smooth, shiny, waterproof surface (most tableware); the glaze and body c...
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https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/21221

Pottery fired to a relatively low temperature. Earthenware is porous if left unglazed so must be glazed if it is to hold food or liquid. Usually fired at low temperatures.
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https://www.hot-clay.com/clay-glossary

a type of ware which is fired at a relatively low temperature (1000c-1100c) to produce a porous form.
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https://www.ipsceramics.com/ceramics-glossary-of-terms/

A low fired clay body. Glazed pottery is fired to a temperature of 1,830
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https://www.jnevins.com/glossary.htm

A type of claybody usually associated with low-fired ceramics. Earthenware tends to be more porous than higher fired clays. The relatively low physical hardness of both the clay and the glaze tend to make earthenware less durable then higher fired claybodies and less appropriate a choice for functional pieces. See also stoneware, porcelain.
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https://www.lakesidepottery.com/HTML%20Text/Tips/A%20pottery%20glossary.htm
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