1 a metal container with a lid that you keep food or other substances in -- puszka
2 a flat pan that you cook food in -- blacha
a roasting tin
3 a soft, silver metal that is often combined with other metals or used to cover them (symbol Sn) -- cyna
The cleansing process allowed the tin oxide gas sensor to stabilise.
The majority of the manufacturing industries, plantations, tin reserves, and population are concentrated in the west.
A high wire fence, with tin sheets along its strands, enclosed the entire western exposure of the camp.
The first ground coffee was not sealed in a tin can until 1878, and the key method for opening cans was not devised until 1895.
The drums are normally referred to in songs as 'pans' and 'tin cans', of which the principle characteristic is the volume of sound produced.
British import of foreign tin jumped from 4,000 tons to 86,600 tons from the 1840s to the 1870s.
Measurements of laser driven spallation in tin and zinc using an optically recording velocity inter ferometer system.
They carried only two tins of food each and toothbrushes.