Make Your Point > Archived Issues > CAULDRON
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In Latin, calor, calidus, and calere mean, respectively, "heat," "hot," and "to be hot."
The word "cauldron" traces back to a Latin one meaning "cooking pot," and further back to the Latin calidus, meaning "warm, or hot." In various spellings, "cauldron" has been around in English since the 1300s.
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Part of speech:
Pick the clear, common, spooky word "cauldron" to describe any situation that seems to boil and bubble like a witch's brew.
"It turned out that under the western United States there was a huge cauldron of magma, a colossal volcanic hot spot which erupted cataclysmically every 600,000 years or so."
Explain the meaning of "cauldron" without saying "crucible" or "bubbling pot."
Describing a character she'd played, Sigourney Weaver told the New York Times that "Norma is a really complex character — I saw her referred to as icy, but I think she’s a cauldron."
Try to spend 20 seconds or more on the game below. Don’t skip straight to the review—first, let your working memory empty out.
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The opposite of a figurative CAULDRON could be
I hope you're enjoying Make Your Point. It's made with love. I'm Liesl Johnson, a reading and writing tutor on a mission to explore, illuminate, and celebrate words. |