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Answer for the clue "Large bottle enclosed in wickerwork ", 8 letters:
demijohn

Alternative clues for the word demijohn

Word definitions for demijohn in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
A demijohn is a container for fluids used in brewing. Demijohn may also refer to: Demijohn Limited , a Scottish business Thom Demijohn , a joint pseudonym used by authors Thomas M. Disch and John Sladek for their satirical novel Black Alice Demijohn Lake ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A large bottle with a short neck, sometimes with two small handles at the neck, sometimes encased in wickerwork.

Usage examples of demijohn.

They crowded into the dogtrot, shouting and laughing and passing demijohns of raw corn whiskey from hand to hand.

But what was stored behind them, in warehouses and in gigantic cellars, in kegs of oil, in stacks of finest lavender soaps, in demijohns of floral colognes, wines, alcohols, in bales of scented leather, in sacks and chests and crates stuffed with spices — Grenouille smelled out every detail through the thickest walls — these were riches beyond those of princes.

The room beyond was cluttered with flowerpots, half-dead blooms and cuttings, seed troughs, cloudy bottles and green demijohns and what looked and smelled like a small sack of dray manure, although, at least in the piled desk and sagging chairs, the place also gave the impression of a kind of office.

With a growl, he lunged out at one of the demijohns of acid which lay nearby.

I improved the taste with a harmless flavoring and filled two demijohns with the mixture, re serving a large flask for Hold use, should it be required.

I decanted the fellis and tussilago into padded demijohns and added to these surreptitious stores a pack containing clothing necessities for myself.

I improved the taste with a harmless flavoring and filled two demijohns with the mixture, reserving a large flask for Hold use, should it be required.

He just kept turning out the old wood-fired earthenware plates and bowls along with salt-glazed stoneware—churns and crocks and demijohns.

Hundreds of bottles and demijohns passed from hand to hand and mouth to mouth, were drunk from blindly in long untasting gurgles, the wine spilling so freely it flooded the cellar.