different between canister vs cannister
canister
English
Etymology
From Middle English canister, canustyr, a borrowing from Latin canistrum.
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /?kæn?st?/
Noun
canister (plural canisters)
- A cylindrical or rectangular container usually of lightweight metal, plastic, or laminated pasteboard used for holding a dry product (as tea, crackers, flour, matches).
- Any of various cylindrical metal receptacles usually with a removable close-fitting top.
- A special short range antipersonnel projectile consisting of a casing of light metal, loaded with preformed submissiles such as flechettes or steel balls. The casing is designed to open just beyond the muzzle of the weapon, dispersing the submissiles.
- A component of canister type protective mask containing a mechanical filter and chemical filling to filter, neutralize and/or absorb toxic chemical, biological and radiological agents.
- A projectile component containing colored or screening smoke or riot control agent composition.
Descendants
- ? Irish: ceanastar
Translations
Verb
canister (third-person singular simple present canisters, present participle canistering, simple past and past participle canistered)
- (transitive) To pack into a canister.
Anagrams
- Certains, Cestrian, Cretians, anticers, cisterna, creatins, nacrites, scantier, tercians
canister From the web:
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cannister
English
Noun
cannister (plural cannisters)
- Obsolete form of canister.
Anagrams
- interscan
cannister From the web:
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- what canister vacuum is the best
- what canister
- what's canister sugar
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- what does canister mean
- canister shot
- what are canisters used for
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