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glaze
verb
To install windows.
Exact(12)
The second type, covered with an opaque white tin glaze, is variously called tin-enameled, or tin-glazed, earthenware, majolica, faience, or delft.
Pop on to a baking tray, brush with a little beaten egg to glaze, and sprinkle lightly with sugar.
He dutifully ran through all the various points of government policies, but there were too many of what Art Laffer calls MEGO figures (my eyes glaze over).
"We have old steel framed windows that are impossible to double glaze, leading to an unnecessary loss of heat, and they either have to be hammered open or shut.
6 While the scones are in the oven, make the glaze for the crosses.
Sprinkle icing sugar on top, bake for a few minutes more to glaze the surface, then remove and leave until lukewarm before eating.
Tell them about Netflix and iPhones and the Large Hadron Collider, and watch them glaze over.
An artist was what he had really wanted to be, and he had simply transferred his painterly feelings to stroking the rich glaze on a shank of lamb, or dashing his signature in a passion-fruit coulis.
UNTIL recently, the glaze on most Mexican pottery contained lead.
Then da Vinci applied up to 30 incredibly thin strokes of glaze above the flesh tone many just a few micrometres thick.In this section Waltzing with death We've got rhythm Expensive Iteration Shadow strokes ReprintsGlaze is mostly translucent, but da Vinci would also slip in small amounts of pigments, such as manganese and lead oxides.
Though some are marked with splashes and smudges of glaze, all have an endearing freshness and even joy.The golden age of azulejo art came during Portugal's colonial expansion.
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