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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a pan full of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a pan that is filled with a particular substance or food item.
Example: "She served a pan full of delicious roasted vegetables at the dinner party."
Alternatives: "a skillet brimming with" or "a frying pan loaded with".
Exact(22)
(Hana had thrown a pan full of boiling pasta at Julian once.
When I imagined a pan full of chocolate banana blondie bars, I could see exactly what I wanted.
Whisk eggs, honey and hot, fresh ginger in a bowl suspended over a pan full of simmering water.
Then a gorgeous tarte tatin appears, as geometric as a mandala, then a pan full of thick, dark chocolatey sauce with the headline "China hit by earthquake".
As well as the fire, I have a small propane cooker, and I go to fill a pan full of water and put it on to heat.
If left unchecked, these areas can cause the syrup to crystallise, resulting in a pan full of grainy sugar crystals – not the desired result.
Similar(38)
A pan-full of the honey-roasted carrots with tahini yoghurt – sticky and thyme-flecked – is all you need for weekend eating.
As we speak, a pan-full of some hideously burnt pork chops appears on the stream page, from The Sportsman's feed.
Shortly thereafter, an African-American cook dumped a frying pan full of parched corn on an oil cloth and announced, "Master, dinner ready," Watkins recalled.
First up was a small effect for Act I, when a character played by Mark Linn-Baker enters holding a frying pan full of firecrackers.
He followed the original message with images of a toilet pan full of Lego bricks signed "R.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com