Search for crossword answers and clues
Distiller's glass vessel, once
Answer for the clue "Distiller's glass vessel, once ", 7 letters:
matrass
Alternative clues for the word matrass
Word definitions for matrass in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
A matrass (mod. Latin matracium ) is a glass vessel with a round or oval body and a long narrow neck, used in chemistry as a digester or distiller. The Florence flask of commerce is frequently used for this purpose. The word is possibly identical with an ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Bolthead \Bolt"head`\, n. (Chem.) A long, straight-necked, glass vessel for chemical distillations; -- called also a matrass or receiver. The head of a bolt.
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context obsolete English) A bolt for a crossbow 2 (context obsolete chemistry English) A bolthead flask
Usage examples of matrass.
It was a small matrass, as one of the elder chemists would have called it, containing a fluid, and hermetically sealed.
If it were so, that the father or the goodman of the house had a matrass or flock-bed, and thereto a sack of chaff to rest his head upon, he thought himself to be as well lodged as the lord of the town, so well were they contented.
On the table where Lady Appleton worked sat all manner of equipment for distillation -- alembic, pelican, matrass -- as well as empty jars, pots, and other vessels made of stoneware, ceramic, glass, horn, pewter, and iron.
And in this welter of spoiled treasure were the great conjuring books hurled amid the ruin of retorts and aludels of glass and lead and silver, sand-baths, matrasses, spatulae, athanors, and other instruments innumerable of rare design, tossed and broken on the chamber floor.
Notwithstanding these precautions, his Prussian majesty, to guard as much as could be against every possible event, sent a great number of gunners and matrasses from Pomerania to Memel, with three regiments of his troops, to reinforce the garrison of that place.
Everywhere, in the gloom, there were vats, cupels, furnaces, alembics, and matrasses of unhuman form, bulking and towering colossally to the pigmy eyes of Maal Dweb.
And in this welter of spoiled treasure were the great conjuring books hurled amid the ruin of retorts and aludels of glass and lead and silver, sand-baths, matrasses, spatulae, athanors, and other instruments innumerable of rare design, tossed and broken on the chamber floor.