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Discover Ludwig"earthenware of" is a grammatically correct phrase and can be used in written English
It typically means "made of earthenware" or "belonging to earthenware." Example: The kitchen shelves were filled with a beautiful collection of earthenware, from delicate teacups to sturdy serving bowls.
Exact(4)
Creamware, cream-coloured English earthenware of the second half of the 18th century and its European imitations.
Faience (tin-glazed earthenware) of mediocre quality was produced there after 1736, but the manufacture of hard-paste, or true, porcelain dates only from 1771.
With the advent of the Seljuqs in the 11th century, faience decoration (glazed earthenware) of an exquisite beauty was introduced, and it gained further prominence under the Timurids (14th 16th centuries).
(Smith) Galleries: SoHo 'Kindred Spirits: Native American Influences on 20th Century Art' (through Jan . 28 This fraught yet exhilarating exhibition centers on a shatteringly beautiful array of American Indian art, including chalky Mimbres burial bowls, electrifying Navajo blankets, Western Apache baskets and dazzling earthenware of Zia, Zuni and Acoma derivation.
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The maker of crystal and tableware Waterford Wedgwood said it would cut more than 10percentt of its British work force and move production of earthenware out of Britain to cut costs.
The paper presents a detailed study of the effect of manganese dioxide on the defluoridation potential of disposed earthenware (DEW) of the particle size less than 300 μm.
According to Marcella Hazan, "from Florence down to Rome" panzanella salad is the favourite choice; Anna del Conte writes evocatively of setting an earthenware pot of panzanella on a scrubbed table in the shade of a fig tree at her farmhouse in Chianti, and pulling up a flask of cool local wine from the well to wash it down.
To take one example, they adopted the Chinese practice of furnishing tombs with earthenware figures of servants and musicians, but gave some of the figures Xianbei clothes and non-Chinese features.
Trays of champagne alternated with earthenware pitchers of hot ginger and whisky.
In about 1877 78 Doulton of Lambeth bought the earthenware factory of Pindar, Bourne and Company at Burslem, Staffordshire.
This spicy blend, redolent of macerated cherries, evokes earthenware bowls of cassoulet and afternoons spent rereading Colette.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com