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  1. single word requests - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    May 18, 2019 · Cisterna, or cistern, : an artificial reservoir (such as an underground tank) for storing liquids and especially water (such as rainwater) -Merriam Webster> ...is a deposit of water in the …

  2. Is there a specific name for this kind of water dispenser?

    0 Cistern is the traditional name for a spigoted vessel. Proper names like this are being lost in the dumbing of society. Retailers call it beverage dispenser since people are less educated and poorly …

  3. American word for commode - English Language & Usage Stack …

    Nov 23, 2014 · And if you’re talking about broken ones, the most common thing to break is probably not the bowl itself, but the cistern that holds the water and most of the mechanics of the toilet.

  4. expressions - Looking for a particular phrase for a subtly important ...

    Apr 16, 2025 · Alternately, one could say it doesn't hold water, figuratively, like a sieve or broken cistern would not. Or perhaps it's inherently flawed [Collins] if, more or less, the thing that makes it breaks it.

  5. Like BFF - 7 Little Words Answers

    This is just one of the 7 puzzles found on this level. You can make another search to find the answers to the other puzzles, or just go to the homepage and then select the pack and the level number in which …

  6. idioms - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Aug 9, 2019 · The first modern flushable toilet was described in 1596 by Sir John Harington, an English courtier and the godson of Queen Elizabeth I. Harington’s device called for a 2-foot-deep oval bowl …

  7. Why is there a US idiom of using China to mean far away?

    May 1, 2019 · The citizens here use cistern water, but about one mile from the town is never failing water, which shows that we wouldn't have to go all the way to China to get that precious necessity by …

  8. Replacement for "brethren" to refer to mostly female group

    Oct 18, 2011 · Despite seeming gender-specific, both brethren AND brothers is preferable to an archaic word that sounds like "cistern"! Returning to the religious theme, there is a word that refers to a …

  9. …down the primrose path - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Aug 5, 2019 · Drink waters out of thine own cistern, and running waters out of thine own well. The Hebrew apostle, Matthew, attrubutes such a warning to Jesus in Chapter 7 of his gospel. Enter ye in …

  10. differences - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    The word nothingness as used in your example implies the absence of any activity — of anything going on. Scientists speak of the "heat death" of the universe, when all matter and energy have been …