Earthen+ware

  • 1Ding ware — ▪ Chinese stoneware Wade Giles romanization  ting        Chinese glazed stoneware produced for many centuries, beginning in the 8th century AD.       Usually white in colour, Ding ware is either plain or decorated with incised, molded, impressed …

    Universalium

  • 2Chandravalli — Location …

    Wikipedia

  • 3earthenware — 1670s, from EARTHEN (Cf. earthen) + WARE (Cf. ware) …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 4Фаянс — Под названием фаянса в керамике принято обозначать глиняные изделия из белой или цветной массы с пористым (проницаемым жидкостями) черепом, который в изломе представляет шероховатый землистый вид и покрыт всегда глазурью, или поливой. Обширный… …

    Энциклопедический словарь Ф.А. Брокгауза и И.А. Ефрона

  • 5Syracuse China — Syracuse China, located in Lyncourt, New York (a suburb of Syracuse), was founded in 1871 as Onondaga Pottery Company (O.P. Co.) in the town of Geddes next to Syracuse and is still producing to this day. Initially a producer of earthenware, in… …

    Wikipedia

  • 6Cadaqués — infobox catalan city image skyline size=200px arms= location province=Girona comarca=Alt Empordà population=2.640 population year=2005 area=15.62 population density=102,6 elevation=23 demonym=Cadaquesenc, cadaquesenca mayor=Joan Borrell i… …

    Wikipedia

  • 7Music of Goa — Music of India Genres Classical (Carnatic · Hindustani) · Bhajan · Ghazal · Qawwali · Sufi · Folk  …

    Wikipedia

  • 8Tariff of 1790 — In 1790, Alexander Hamilton, the secretary of the treasury, calculated that the United States required $3 million a year for operating expenses as well as enough revenue to repay the estimated $75 million in foreign and domestic debt. Under the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 9pottery — n. Earthen ware, clay ware …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 10Biscuit — Bis cuit, n. [F. biscuit (cf. It. biscotto, Sp. bizcocho, Pg. biscouto), fr. L. bis twice + coctus, p. p. of coquere to cook, bake. See {Cook}, and cf. {Bisque} a kind of porcelain.] 1. A kind of unraised bread, of many varieties, plain, sweet,… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English