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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
saucer
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a cup and saucer
▪ Do you prefer a mug or a cup and saucer?
flying saucer
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
flying
▪ On this particular occasion however, it is a nifty little flying saucer.
▪ If we can not accept flying saucers, we must at least accept floating plates.
■ VERB
fly
▪ His flying saucer, however, is made of glass fibre and runs on compressed air.
▪ He would not raise his eyes to the sky, though he knew there was a flying saucer from Tralfamadore up there.
▪ If you stare at the flying saucer long enough it begins to vibrate.
▪ He said, too, that he had been kidnapped by a flying saucer in 1967.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But as she washed her breakfast cup and saucer and rinsed them meticulously under the cold tap, she was anxious.
▪ Cigarette ashes crusted with coffee in saucers or spilled over the sides of motel ashtrays.
▪ Coffee cup in hand, slopping the liquid in its saucer, I went out on to the terrace.
▪ Cups, saucers, teapot, milk jug with its little muslin cloth, plates and splattered jam.
▪ He placed his cup and its flooded saucer separately on the coffee table and sat back in his chair.
▪ Shamrock cup and saucer by Beleek Bestlite 31170 solid brass lamp base with dark green enamelled shade.
▪ The old man opened his eyes, saucers of terror.
▪ The table was set with matching cups and saucers, bright silverware, old plates and a small pitcher of milk.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Saucer

Saucer \Sau"cer\, n. [F. sauci[`e]re, from sauce. See Sauce.]

  1. A small pan or vessel in which sauce was set on a table. [Obs.]
    --Bacon.

  2. A small dish, commonly deeper than a plate, in which a cup is set at table.

  3. Something resembling a saucer in shape. Specifically:

    1. A flat, shallow caisson for raising sunken ships.

    2. A shallow socket for the pivot of a capstan.

      Flying saucer, a type of Unidentified Flying Object, having a biconvex discoid shape; such objects are occasionally reported to have been sighted, but no example of one has been reliably shown to exist. They are believed by ufologists to originate in outer space, but they are generally presumed to be misinterpretations of ordinary phenomena, illusions or imaginary objects. Fraudulent photographs purporting to show flying saucers are published from time to time.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
saucer

mid-14c., from Anglo-Latin saucerium and Old French saussier (Modern French saucière) "sauce dish," from Late Latin salsarium, neuter of salsarius "of or for salted things," from Latin salsus (see sauce (n.)). Originally a small dish or pan in which sauce is set on a table. Meaning "small, round, shallow vessel for supporting a cup and retaining any liquid which might be spilled" is attested from c.1702.

Wiktionary
saucer

n. 1 A small shallow dish to hold a cup and catch drips. 2 An object round and gently curved (shaped like a saucer). 3 (context obsolete English) A small pan or vessel in which sauce was set on a table. 4 A flat, shallow caisson for raising sunken ships. 5 A shallow socket for the pivot of a capstan. vb. (context transitive English) To pour (tea, etc.) from the cup into the saucer in order to cool it before drinking.

WordNet
saucer
  1. n. something with a round shape like a flat circular plate [syn: disk, disc]

  2. a small shallow dish for holding a cup at the table

  3. directional antenna consisting of a parabolic reflector for microwave or radio frequency radiation [syn: dish, dish aerial, dish antenna]

  4. a disk used in throwing competitions [syn: discus]

Wikipedia
Saucer

A saucer is a type of small dishware. While in the Middle Ages a saucer was used for serving condiments and sauces, currently the term is used to denote a small plate or shallow bowl that supports a cup – usually one used to serve coffee or tea (see teacup). The center of the saucer often contains a depression sized to fit a mating cup; this depression is sometimes raised, and antique saucers may omit it altogether. The saucer is useful for protecting surfaces from possible damage due to the heat of a cup, and to catch overflow, splashes, and drips from the cup, thus protecting both table linen and the user sitting in a free-standing chair who holds both cup and saucer. The saucer also provides a convenient place for a damp spoon, as might be used to stir the drink in the cup in order to mix sweeteners or creamers into tea or coffee. Some people pour the hot tea or coffee from the cup into the saucer; the increased surface area of the liquid exposed to the air increases the rate at which it cools, allowing the drinker to consume the beverage quickly after preparation. Some animals, including cats, may also be fed from bowl-shaped saucers.

Although often part of a place setting in a dinner set, teacups with unique styling are often sold with matching saucers, sometimes alone, or as part of a tea set, including a teapot and small dessert plates. A set of four is typical for a tea set.

Saucers have very little direct influence on beverage cooling rate: cups typically have low contact area with the saucer, so the heat transfer rate is low.

For hot, water based beverages (eg tea or coffee) cooling rate in a cup, is typically dominated by evaporation, which occurs across the free surface in contact with the air. Placing a saucer on top of a cup prevents such evaporative cooling taking place and is thus an effective way of reducing the cooling rate so that the drink remains warmer for longer. The reduction in heat loss due to evaporation is typically much greater than the increase in heat loss associated with conduction through the saucer (and subsequent radiation or convective transfer to the surrounding air).

Usage examples of "saucer".

Coral Lorenzen, author of The Great Flying Saucer Hoax and an international director of the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization, immediately followed through on the startling rumors by putting in a call to Terry Clarke of KALG Radio in Alamogordo, nine miles east of Holloman.

Dasha, Marina, and Babushka were squeezed around the table, all devouring Alexander with their eyes, all except Tatiana, who was standing in the doorway, her hands full of cups and saucers.

The photographs, which were widely reproduced in saucer publications, were always rather dark, distorted, and blobby, and Menger apologized that he was such a poor photographer.

And it apparently appealed to him, for this one saucer contains evidence of many bookish nights.

Then he hooked his hat on a wood peg and combed his hair in an oxidized mirror, lit an unfiltered cigarette, and sat down at a table by himself while a mulatto woman brought him a shot of whiskey and a beer on the side and a length of white boudin in a saucer.

Even if he did come from a flying saucer, the Bungers sure knew how to act like relatives.

Presently Bunty got off his chair, covered up his coffee with his saucer to keep the flies out, and solemnly left the room.

With a pile of diet wafers and a snack bar balanced on a saucer in one hand, a pot of caff in the other, and a notebook under his arm, Procyon navigated the door of his basement home office, elbowed the switch, and let the robot turn the lights on.

She came back in, pushing a wheeled serving cart upon which sat a silver caffe pot, a spoon, and a single caffe cup with saucer.

He took a sip of the caffe and then returned the cup to its saucer before he spoke again.

Madam Dorst said, glancing in horrified amazement from the cup she was turning right side up on its saucer.

She vowed it was done curmudgeonly to vex her, because her uncle hated wedding-presents and had grunted at the exhibition of cups and saucers, and this and that beautiful service, and epergnes and inkstands, mirrors, knives and forks, dressing-cases, and the whole mighty category.

UFO base in Massachusetts and even took him for a little faunt in a flying saucer.

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However, the Excalibur saucer was bound by the laws of physics, able to maneuver only just so fast and no faster, while the godship moved to laws all its own.