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"boiling cauldron" is correct and can be used in written English.
You can use it to describe a pot or container of boiling liquid or other substances, generally one that is very large. For example, “The witch stirred her boiling cauldron of spells and potions.”.
Exact(36)
"This country is a boiling cauldron," said McCormick-Dunlap.
His sister was like a "boiling cauldron of hatred".
At the very end of the opera, Rachel is thrown into a boiling cauldron, with Éléazar soon to follow.
In the ordeal by hot water, the accused had to plunge his hand into a boiling cauldron to pluck out a stone.
"Sitting in the stands night after night, a boiling cauldron of hatred bubbling inside me — it doesn't get better than that.
The lack of tension was made more conspicuous by Watson, who was so understated as to make Yvette Cooper seem a boiling cauldron of charisma.
Similar(24)
Beakers will become boiling cauldrons.
Have they not thrown them into boiling cauldrons of cane syrup?
In the middle of the table, I'll have these boiling cauldrons, so this smell, I'll pair with, like, the cheese in my bacon-and-eggs dish.
It's a lot easier to boil cauldrons of conflicting goals and emotions down to "red hair" than admit "I didn't want to get married".
In his pictures of Mud Geyser, on the Yellowstone, a boiling brown cauldron that shoots up clouds of steam, he painted or scratched on the glass negative more steam and swirling water.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com