warming pan
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A warming pan is a historical household utensil. It is a long-handled, covered metal pan designed to hold hot coals or embers. Its primary function was to warm and dry beds by moving the heated pan between the sheets before a person retired for sleep.
Usage
The term warming pan is used specifically to refer to this antique object. It is a compound noun, and its meaning is fixed. It is typically used in historical, descriptive, or museum contexts.
Examples
- Before the invention of electric blankets, servants would use a warming pan to prepare the master's bed.
- The museum's collection of 18th-century domestic items includes a beautifully engraved brass warming pan.
- In the historical novel, the maid filled the warming pan with hot coals from the fireplace.
Advanced Usage
- Historical/Metaphorical Reference: The term can be used metaphorically to refer to something that temporarily holds a place or position until the rightful or permanent occupant is ready.
- The young prince was seen by some nobles as merely a warming pan for the throne until a more suitable heir could be produced. (This usage is rare and highly specialized, often drawing on a specific historical context or allusion.)
Variants and Related Words
- Bed warmer: A more general, descriptive term for the same object.
- Hot water bottle: A modern functional equivalent for warming a bed, but using hot water instead of coals.
- Electric blanket: A modern functional equivalent.
Synonyms
- Bed warmer
Antonyms
- There is no direct antonym, but objects with an opposite function (cooling) are not historically equivalent household items.
Notes
The warming pan is an obsolete technology. Its use declined with the advent of central heating and modern bedding. The word is almost exclusively encountered in discussions of historical domestic life, antique collections, or period literature and film.
Noun
- a long-handled covered pan holding live coals to warm a bed