Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun In Greek antiquity, a form of earthenware vase, of very large size and spheroid shape, used for the storage of wine, oil, grain, etc., and sometimes for the burial of dead bodies.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • Her breath snagged in her throat as she stood before the centerpiece of the exhibit: a double-handled clay jar called a pithos, almost four feet in height.

    Sparks Laura Bickle 2010

  • Her breath snagged in her throat as she stood before the centerpiece of the exhibit: a double-handled clay jar called a pithos, almost four feet in height.

    Sparks Laura Bickle 2010

  • Her breath snagged in her throat as she stood before the centerpiece of the exhibit: a double-handled clay jar called a pithos, almost four feet in height.

    Sparks Laura Bickle 2010

  • “This pithos is still special, though,” Gallus continued.

    Sparks Laura Bickle 2010

  • The massive pithos was painted with images from the myth.

    Sparks Laura Bickle 2010

  • In the third, the pithos lay on its side, the jar leaking fearsome black shapes into the sky.

    Sparks Laura Bickle 2010

  • Could store anything in a pithos—grain, oil, wine—even a body.

    Sparks Laura Bickle 2010

  • In the third, the pithos lay on its side, the jar leaking fearsome black shapes into the sky.

    Sparks Laura Bickle 2010

  • Anya walked around the cabinet, trying to get a better view of the pithos.

    Sparks Laura Bickle 2010

  • In the next scene, her hands were on the top of the pithos.

    Sparks Laura Bickle 2010

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