Citations:kendi

Etymology Citations

 * "Kendi", SEAPots - South East Asia Pottery, []
 * "Kendi", a Malay word, is a derivative o[f] "kundika", a Sanskrit word meaning "water pot".


 * 2003, Nik Hassan Shuhaimi Nik Abd. Rahman & Aryaari bin Muhamad, "Protohistoric Earthenwares from Kuala Selinsing Perak", in "Earthenware in Southeast Asia: proceedings of the Singapore Symposium on Premodern Southeast Asian Earthenwares" by John N. Miksic, Southeast Asian Ceramic Society, NUS Press, []
 * The term kendi is Malay, and derives from the Sanskrit word kundi (a pot with a spout); it is sometimes diminutized as kundika (Khoo Jooe Ee 1991:3-4).

Citations Concerning Being Multi-spouted

 * 2003, Nik Hassan Shuhaimi Nik Abd. Rahman & Aryaari bin Muhamad, "Protohistoric Earthenwares from Kuala Selinsing Perak", in "Earthenware in Southeast Asia: proceedings of the Singapore Symposium on Premodern Southeast Asian Earthenwares" by John N. Miksic, Southeast Asian Ceramic Society, NUS Press, []
 * Also from Palembang are four-spouted kendi, similar in concept to the two-spouted examples and also simple, heavily potted water bottles similar to the labu air of northeastern Sumatra.


 * "Southeast Asian Kendi - Late 19th Cty.", Ichiban Japanese Antiques, []
 * The typical Southeast Asian pouring vessel, kendi, is spherical in shape with one or more rounded spouts.