Definition, Bedeutung & Synonyme | Englisch Wort EARTHENWARE


EARTHENWARE

Definitionen von EARTHENWARE

  1. Steingutgeschirr, Steingut, Töpferware

2

Anzahl der Buchstaben

11

Ist Palindrom

Nein

24
AR
ARE
ART
EA
EAR
EN
HE
HEN
NW
NWA

1

1

882
AA
AAE
AAH
AAN
AAR
AAT
AAW
AE
AEA
AER
AET


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Beispiele für die Verwendung von EARTHENWARE in einem Satz

  • Marmite was originally supplied in earthenware pots but since the 1920s has been sold in glass jars.
  • From Roman times there are names and shards of earthenware which suggest that there was an army camp at the site of Elburg.
  • Arhaeologic evidence of earthenware, soapstone ware, pestles, hatchets, ornaments and charms were found on the land that is across the river from Lycoming Creek and near where the Sheshequin Path crossed the river.
  • Later nicknamed “Pot Town,” Strasburg also became a center for the production of both utilitarian and fancy earthenware and stoneware pottery.
  • In art, pottery, applied art, craft, construction and architecture, "terracotta" is a term often used for red-coloured earthenware sculptures or functional articles such as flower pots, water and waste water pipes, tableware, roofing tiles and surface embellishment on buildings.
  • The study of archaeologists has found evidence of human habitation since prehistoric times in Dvaravati period in Buriram including cultural evidence from the ancient Khmer Empire, which has both a brick castle and more than 60 stone castles, and have found important archaeological sites, including kilns, pottery and pottery, earthenware called Khmer wares, which determines the age around the 15th-18th.
  • They may consist of simple earthenware bowls or fire pots to intricately carved silver or gold vessels, small table top objects a few centimetres tall to as many as several metres high.
  • Other important historic uses included coating earthenware vessels for the preservation of wine, waterproofing wooden containers, and making torches.
  • Earthenware funerary objects (haniwa) discovered around this mound include figurines of warriors almost certainly placed with a protective purpose (The form of such a warrior was used as the design basis for the city's official mascot character, Hanitan).
  • However, earthenware can be made impervious to liquids by coating it with a ceramic glaze, and such a process is used for the great majority of modern domestic earthenware.
  • As the word's Italian origin indicates, pignatta (also pignata and pignàta) meaning "earthenware cooking pot", the Spanish initially used a plain clay container, before starting to decorate it with ribbons, tinsel and colored paper.
  • On the northern side of the courtyard, one finds storage rooms containing large earthenware pithos jars, some reaching heights of up to two meters.
  • They used several burial styles, both cremated as well as buried with enclosed wooden caskets, barrel-shaped open containers and earthenware coffins called kameganbo (turtle caskets).
  • Italian tin-glazed earthenware, at least the early forms, is called maiolica in English, Dutch wares are called Delftware, and their English equivalents English delftware, leaving "faience" as the normal term in English for French, German, Spanish, Portuguese wares and those of other countries not mentioned (it is also the usual French term, and fayence in German).
  • Traditional East Asian thinking classifies pottery only into "low-fired" and "high-fired" wares, equating to earthenware and porcelain, without the intermediate European class of stoneware, and the many local types of stoneware were mostly classed as porcelain, though often not white and translucent.
  • The tiles and ceramics are the original Nord-Sud decorative style with advertising frames and nameplates of the station are in a green colour, green geometric designs on the walls and the vault, the name inscribed in white earthenware on a blue background of small size above the advertising frames and very large between these frames, as well as the directions incorporated into the ceramic tile on the tympans.
  • In contrast, the advertising frames are honey-colored earthenware and the name of the station is also written on the earthenware in the style of the original CMP.
  • 150px The station has a single entrance called "Place Paul-Signac", leading to the said place facing Avenue Gambetta in the form of an original entrance with bas reliefs and earthenware decoration, designed in 1922 by Charles Plumet, particularity that it only shares with the Saint-Fargeau and Porte des Lilas stations on the same line.
  • The advertising frames are made of honey-coloured earthenware and the name of the station is also made of earthenware in the style of the original CMP, while the subtitle underneath is inscribed in Parisine font on small, enamelled plates.
  • The walls of the western side of the platform are tiled with bevelled white tiles, with the name of the station written in earthenware and the advertising frames with plant motifs, also in earthenware, are honey-coloured.


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