oil lamp
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- A lamp that produces light by burning a liquid fuel, such as kerosene or vegetable oil, typically using a wick to draw the fuel up to a flame.
Usage Examples
- Noun:
- Before electricity, the oil lamp was the primary source of light in many homes.
- She filled the glass reservoir of the oil lamp with kerosene.
- The flickering light from the antique oil lamp created a warm, cozy atmosphere in the room.
Advanced Usage
- Historical/Cultural Context: The term "oil lamp" often evokes a pre-electric era and is associated with historical settings, rustic decor, or emergency preparedness.
- The museum exhibit featured Roman-era clay oil lamps.
- Functional Description: Used to specify the type of lamp, distinguishing it from electric lamps, gas lamps, or candles.
- For the camping trip, they packed a reliable oil lamp instead of relying on flashlights.
Variants and Related Words
- Kerosene lamp: A specific and common type of oil lamp designed to burn kerosene. Often used synonymously with "oil lamp" in modern contexts.
- Lamp: The general category. An oil lamp is a type of lamp.
- Wick: The absorbent cord in an oil lamp that draws fuel up to the flame.
- Lantern: A portable, often protective casing for a light source, which can contain an oil lamp.
Synonyms
- Kerosene lamp
- Paraffin lamp (common in British English)
Related Phrases
- To light an oil lamp: The action of igniting the wick to produce light.
- As the sun set, he lit the oil lamp on the table.
- To trim the wick of an oil lamp: To maintain the lamp by cutting the burnt end of the wick for a cleaner flame.
- The flame was smoking, so she trimmed the wick of the oil lamp.
Noun
- a lamp that burns oil (as kerosine) for light