What is another word for cistern?

Pronunciation: [sˈɪstən] (IPA)

Cistern is a term used in civil engineering, plumbing, and architecture to refer to an artificial water storage system. Some synonyms for cistern include tank, reservoir, well, storage, basin, and receptacle. While all of these terms relate to a container that holds water, they differ in the method of storage or the location. For example, a well is an underground storage system for water, while a basin may refer to a smaller container than a cistern. Whether used in urban or rural settings, cisterns and their synonyms are essential for ensuring adequate water supply, particularly in areas where water may be scarce or inaccessible.

Synonyms for Cistern:

What are the paraphrases for Cistern?

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What are the hypernyms for Cistern?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the hyponyms for Cistern?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.

Usage examples for Cistern

It was as she handed me the four black hooks and the paper of screws for this purpose one evening that the sound of the cistern sank to a hissing.
"The Debit Account"
Oliver Onions
But there was nothing to be done with the cistern; if she stayed there she would have to get used to it, that was all.
"The Debit Account"
Oliver Onions
They seemed to have come for the evening, for their hats were on the hooks on the cistern post.
"The Debit Account"
Oliver Onions

Famous quotes with Cistern

  • The excavators cleared out one of the ancient cisterns, and a few of the winter rains sufficed to fill the cistern with enough water to supply the expedition with water for the whole season. This illustrates the possibilities of almost any country, provided the right kind of people are there.
    Cyrus H. Gordon
  • Ah jist shrugged, -- Well, as one anarchist plumber sais tae the other: smash the cistern.
    Irvine Welsh
  • The city is very different from the country, girl. It is a kind of shared consciousness that begins its work on you as soon as you enter it, if not well before, a consciousness that begins to separate you from the country possibly even before you decide to journey toward it. It encircles you with forces much greater than the walls and gates which imitate tinier villages or towns. People who come to it come seeking the future, not realizing all that will finally affect them in it is their own, only more or less aware, involvement with the past. The way we do things here—really, that’s all there is to be learned in our precincts. But in the paving of every wide, clear avenue, in the turnings of every dark, overhung alley, in the ornaments on every cornice, in the salt-stained stones of each neighborhood cistern, there are traces of the way things were done—which is the key to why they are done as they are today.
    Samuel R. Delany

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