AI & ChatGPT searches , social queriess for BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

Search references for BOLESAWIEC POTTERY. Phrases containing BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

See searches and references containing BOLESAWIEC POTTERY!

AI searches containing BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

  • Bolesławiec
  • Place in Lower Silesian Voivodeship, Poland

    Zak, 32 Mack, Review, 129 Mack, Review, 130. "Miasta partnerskie". xn--bolesawiec-e0b.pl (in Polish). Bolesławiec. Retrieved 2019-09-24. Adler, Beatrix

    Bolesławiec

    Bolesławiec

    Bolesławiec

AI & ChatGPT searchs for online references containing BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

AI search references containing BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

  • GOLYATH
  • Male

    Hebrew

    GOLYATH

    (גָּלְיַת) Hebrew name GOLYATH means "exile." In the bible, this is the name of a Philistine giant slain by David. A shard of pottery unearthed by archaeologists digging at Tell es-Safi, bears two Proto-Semitic names (alwt and wlt) which are etymologically similar to Hebrew Galyat/Golyat/Golyath. The shard dates to around 950 BC, very close to the time when the bible says Goliath lived. 

    GOLYATH

  • Thrower
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (mainly East Anglia)

    Thrower

    English (mainly East Anglia) : occupational name for someone who made silk thread from raw silk, from an agent derivative of Middle English thrōw(en) (Old English þrāwan ‘to twist’). From the 13th century the verb began to be used in its modern sense, including throwing clay in pottery, and so in some cases the surname may have originated as an occupational name for a potter.

    Thrower

  • Baker
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Baker

    English : occupational name, from Middle English bakere, Old English bæcere, a derivative of bacan ‘to bake’. It may have been used for someone whose special task in the kitchen of a great house or castle was the baking of bread, but since most humbler households did their own baking in the Middle Ages, it may also have referred to the owner of a communal oven used by the whole village. The right to be in charge of this and exact money or loaves in return for its use was in many parts of the country a hereditary feudal privilege. Compare Miller. Less often the surname may have been acquired by someone noted for baking particularly fine bread or by a baker of pottery or bricks.Americanized form of cognates or equivalents in many other languages, for example German Bäcker, Becker; Dutch Bakker, Bakmann; French Boulanger. For other forms see Hanks and Hodges (1988).Baker was well established as an early immigrant family name in Puritan New England. Among others, two men called Remember Baker (father and son) lived at Woodbury, CT, in the early 17th century, and an Alexander Baker arrived in Boston, MA, in 1635.

    Baker

  • GOLIATH
  • Male

    English

    GOLIATH

    Anglicized form of Hebrew Golyath, GOLIATH means "exile." In the bible, this is the name of a Philistine giant slain by David. A shard of pottery unearthed by archaeologists digging at Tell es-Safi, bears two Proto-Semitic names (alwt and wlt) which are etymologically similar to Hebrew Galyat/Golyat/Golyath. The shard dates to around 950 BC, very close to the time when the bible says Goliath lived. 

    GOLIATH

AI search queriess for Facebook and twitter posts, hashtags with BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

Follow users with usernames @BOLESAWIEC POTTERY or posting hashtags containing #BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

Online names & meanings

AI search & ChatGPT queriess for Facebook and twitter users, user names, hashtags with BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

Top AI & ChatGPT search, Social media, medium, facebook & news articles containing BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

AI searchs for Acronyms & meanings containing BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

AI searches, Indeed job searches and job offers containing BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

Other words and meanings similar to

BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

BOLESAWIEC POTTERY

  • Majolica
  • n.

    A kind of pottery, with opaque glazing and showy, which reached its greatest perfection in Italy in the 16th century.

  • Lustering
  • n.

    The act or process of imparting a luster, as to pottery.

  • Seggar
  • n.

    A case or holder made of fire clay, in which fine pottery is inclosed while baking in the kin.

  • Stillion
  • n.

    A stand, as for casks or vats in a brewery, or for pottery while drying.

  • Pug
  • v. t.

    To mix and stir when wet, as clay for bricks, pottery, etc.

  • Pottery
  • n.

    The place where earthen vessels are made.

  • Ceramics
  • n.

    The art of making things of baked clay; as pottery, tiles, etc.

  • Zaffer
  • n.

    A pigment obtained, usually by roasting cobalt glance with sand or quartz, as a dark earthy powder. It consists of crude cobalt oxide, or of an impure cobalt arseniate. It is used in porcelain painting, and in enameling pottery, to produce a blue color, and is often confounded with smalt, from which, however, it is distinct, as it contains no potash. The name is often loosely applied to mixtures of zaffer proper with silica, or oxides of iron, manganese, etc.

  • Potteries
  • pl.

    of Pottery

  • Pottery
  • n.

    The vessels or ware made by potters; earthenware, glazed and baked.

  • Nonesuch
  • n.

    A person or thing of a sort that there is no other such; something extraordinary; a thing that has not its equal. It is given as a name to various objects, as to a choice variety of apple, a species of medic (Medicago lupulina), a variety of pottery clay, etc.

  • Palissy
  • a.

    Designating, or of the nature of, a kind of pottery made by Bernard Palissy, in France, in the 16th centry.

  • Muffle
  • v. t.

    A small oven for baking and fixing the colors of painted or printed pottery, without exposing the pottery to the flames of the furnace or kiln.

  • Sigillated
  • a.

    Decorated by means of stamps; -- said of pottery.

  • Pugging
  • v. t.

    The act or process of working and tempering clay to make it plastic and of uniform consistency, as for bricks, for pottery, etc.

  • Ceramic
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to pottery; relating to the art of making earthenware; as, ceramic products; ceramic ornaments for ceilings.

  • Smeir
  • n.

    A salt glaze on pottery, made by adding common salt to an earthenware glaze.