kiln
English

Myrtleford, Victoria, Australia: historic tobacco kiln
Alternative forms
- kill (rare)
Etymology
From Middle English kilne, from Old English cylene or cyline (“large oven”), from Latin culīna (“kitchen, kitchen stove”).
The pronunciation with /n/ is probably a spelling pronunciation, but may have been supported by dialects where /ln/ was not simplified to /l/.
Pronunciation
- (General American, Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /kɪl(n)/
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -ɪl, -ɪln
- Homophone: kill (for the pronunciation /kɪl/)
Noun
kiln (plural kilns)
- An oven or furnace or a heated chamber, for the purpose of hardening, burning, calcining or drying anything; for example, firing ceramics, curing or preserving tobacco, or drying grain.
- 2006, Edwin Black, chapter 2, in Internal Combustion:
- One typical Grecian kiln engorged one thousand muleloads of juniper wood in a single burn. Fifty such kilns would devour six thousand metric tons of trees and brush annually.
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Derived terms
Translations
oven, furnace or heated chamber
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Indonesian
Etymology
From English kiln, from Middle English kilne, from Old English cylene or cyline (“large oven”), from Latin culīna (“kitchen, kitchen stove”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈkɪln], [ˈkɪlə̆n]
- Hyphenation: kiln
Noun
kiln (first-person possessive kilnku, second-person possessive kilnmu, third-person possessive kilnnya)
- (archaeology) kiln, an oven or furnace or a heated chamber, for the purpose of hardening, burning, calcining or drying anything; for example, firing ceramics, curing or preserving tobacco, or drying grain.
Further reading
- “kiln” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, Jakarta: Language Development and Fostering Agency — Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic Indonesia, 2016.
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