porcelain

pronunciation

How to pronounce porcelain in British English: UK [ˈpɔːsəlɪn]word uk audio image

How to pronounce porcelain in American English: US [ˈpɔːrsəlɪn] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    ceramic ware made of a more or less translucent ceramic

Word Origin

porcelain
porcelain: [16] The bizarre history of the word porcelain leads us back to a pig’s vagina. It was originally applied to fine china in Italian, as porcellana. This meant literally ‘cowrie shell’, and was used for the china in allusion to its shelllike sheen. Porcellana was a derivative of porcella ‘little sow’, a diminutive form of porca ‘sow’ (to which English pork is related), and was applied to cowrie shells because they supposedly resembled the external genitalia of female pigs. English acquired the word via French porcelaine.=> pork
porcelain (n.)
1530s, from Middle French porcelaine and directly from Italian porcellana "porcelain" (13c.), literally "cowrie shell," the chinaware so called from resemblance of its lustrous transparency to the shiny surface of the shells. The shell's name in Italian is from porcella "young sow," fem. of Latin porcellus "young pig," diminutive of porculus "piglet," diminutive of porcus "pig" (see pork (n.)). According to an old theory, the connection of the shell and the pig is a perceived resemblance of the shell opening to the exposed outer genitalia of pigs. porcelain is china & china is p.; there is no recondite difference between the two things, which indeed are not two, but one; & the difference between the two words is merely that china is the homely term, while porcelain is exotic & literary. [Fowler]

Example

1. European porcelain was invented 300 years ago in germany .
2. Obviously , the porcelain is molded this way-but why ?
3. It is the best quality porcelain .
4. The word eventually transformed to porcelain to describe fine pottery .
5. The chinese are favouring highly decorative blue-and-white ming porcelain .

more: >How to Use "porcelain" with Example Sentences