calori-, calor-, calo-, cal-, cale-

(Latin: heat, warm; related to caust-, (fire, burn, burnt, burner))

caldron, cauldron (s) (noun), caldrons, cauldrons (pl)
1. A very large pot that is used for boiling or cooking food over a fire.
2. A condition or situation of great distress or unrest which is felt to be like a boiling kettle or vat: The university was a cauldron of conflicting racial protests that students were presenting and which resulted in the resignation of the president.
3. Etymology: from Late Latin caldaria, from feminine of Latin caldarius, "suitable for warming"; from calidarium, "hot bath"; from calidus, "warm".
calefacient (adjective), more calefacient, most calefacient
Relating to something that produces the sensation of heat when it is applied to a person's body: Christine's husband put a calefacient mustard plaster on the bruise she had on her leg.
calefaction
calefactory
calescent
caliduction (s) (noun), caliductions (pl)
During the Roman times, the process of using a pipe or canal to convey heat from a furnace to the various apartments of a house.
California
calorescence
calorescent
calorgenic
caloric
caloricity
calorie
calorifacient
calorific