See also: cháwǎn

English

edit
 

Etymology

edit

From Mandarin 茶碗 (cháwǎn) or Japanese 茶碗 (chawan, literally tea bowl).

Noun

edit

chawan (plural chawans or chawan)

  1. An East Asian tea bowl, in which tea may be prepared and then consumed.
    • 2019, Michelle and Rob Comins, Tales of the Tea Trade[1], Pavilion, →ISBN:
      Mr Miyagawa also pointed out that different seasons demanded different chawans, with wide, flatter shapes being used in summer time, and smaller, deeper ones that don't lose heat so quickly are used in winter times.

See also

edit

Further reading

edit

Iban

edit

Etymology

edit

From Mandarin 茶碗 (cháwǎn, teacup).

Noun

edit

chawan

  1. cup (vessel for drinking)

Japanese

edit

Romanization

edit

chawan

  1. Rōmaji transcription of ちゃわん