oil lamp - translation to greek
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oil lamp - translation to greek

OBJECT USED TO PRODUCE LIGHT CONTINUOUSLY FOR A PERIOD OF TIME USING AN OIL-BASED FUEL SOURCE
Oil lamps; Oil Lamp; Hand Grenade Oil Lamps; Ancient oil lamp; Ancient Oil Lamps; Lampada; Deepalakshmi; Paavai vilakku; Oil lantern; Oil Lamps; Roman Oil Lamps
  • Deepalakshmi}} oil lamp from [[Kumbakonam]]
  • Seal oil lamps
  • Simple contemporary Indian clay oil lamp during [[Diwali]]
  • Modern oil lamp of [[Germany]] with flat wick
  • Group of ancient lamps ([[Hellenistic]] and Roman)
  • Lamps in a temple at [[Wayanad]], Kerala, India
  • Oil lamp of [[Korea]]
  • A late antique oil lamp showing a human figure identified as Christ.
  • Kuthuvilakku}}
  • Antique bronze oil lamp with the "[[Chi Rho]]", a Christian symbol (replica)
  • Paavai vilakku}}: brass oil lamp from [[Tamil Nadu]] in the image of [[Andal]]
  • Oil lamp burning before the [[icon]] of St. Mercurius of Smolensk, [[Kyiv Pechersk Lavra]], [[Ukraine]]
  • Sukunda oil lamp of [[Kathmandu Valley]], Nepal
  • Neolithic stone lamps in the Thousand Lamp Museum in [[Qiandeng]], [[Kunshan]], [[Suzhou]]

oil lamp         
n. λυχνάρι
kerosene lamp         
  • "Central-draft" tubular-wick kerosene lamp
  • Dead-flame
  • Cold-blast
  • New Zealand Railways]] lamp on the [[Weka Pass Railway]]
  • Sumburgh Head lighthouse]] until 1976.
  • Hot-blast
TYPE OF LIGHTING DEVICE
Paraffin lamp; Pressure lamp; Kerosine Lamp; Kerosene lantern; Hurricane lamp; Hurricane lantern; Kerosene pressure lamp; Kerosene lamps; Kerosene lighting; Kerosine Lantern; Hurricane Lanterns
λάμπα πετρέλαιου
olive oil         
  • A cold press olive oil machine in [[Israel]]
  • Egyptian Olives
  • General chemical structure of food fats ([[triglyceride]]). R<sup>1</sup>, R<sup>2</sup> and R<sup>3</sup> are [[alkyl group]]s (approx. 20%) or alkenyl groups (approx. 80%).
  • Olive oil mill
  • A bottle of Italian olive oil
  • Ancient Greek olive oil production workshop in [[Klazomenai]], [[Ionia]] (modern Turkey)
  • Italian label for "extra vergine" oil
  • Olive crusher ''(trapetum)'' in Pompeii (79 AD)
  • [[Olive]]s in olive oil
  • ''The Manufacture of Oil'', 16th-century engraving by [[Jost Amman]]
  • Ancient oil press (Bodrum Museum of Underwater Archaeology, Bodrum, Turkey)
  • [[Vinegar]] and olive oil
LIQUID FAT EXTRACTED BY PRESSING OLIVES
Extra virgin olive oil; EVOO; Olive Oil; Extra-virgine olive oil; Extra Virgin Olive Oil; Olivolja; Xvoo; Pomace oil; Lampante; Virgin olive oil; Extra-virgin olive oil; Olive-oil; Health effects of olive oil
n. ελαιόλαδο

Definition

oil lamp
¦ noun a lamp using oil as fuel.

Wikipedia

Oil lamp

An oil lamp is a lamp used to produce light continuously for a period of time using an oil-based fuel source. The use of oil lamps began thousands of years ago and continues to this day, although their use is less common in modern times. They work in the same way as a candle but with fuel that is liquid at room temperature, so that a container for the oil is required. A textile wick drops down into the oil, and is lit at the end, burning the oil as it is drawn up the wick.

Oil lamps are a form of lighting, and were used as an alternative to candles before the use of electric lights. Starting in 1780, the Argand lamp quickly replaced other oil lamps still in their basic ancient form. These in turn were replaced by the kerosene lamp in about 1850. In small towns and rural areas the latter continued in use well into the 20th century, until such areas were finally electrified and light bulbs could be used.

Sources of fuel for oil lamps include a wide variety of plants such as nuts (walnuts, almonds, and kukui) and seeds (sesame, olive, castor, or flax). Also widely used were animal fats (butter, ghee, fish oil, shark liver, whale blubber, or seal). Camphine, a blend of turpentine and ethanol, was the first "burning fluid" fuel for lamps after whale oil supplies were depleted. It was replaced by kerosene after the US Congress enacted excise taxes on alcohol to pay for the American Civil War.

Most modern lamps (such as fueled lanterns) have been replaced by gas-based or petroleum-based fuels to operate when emergency non-electric light is required. Therefore, oil lamps of today are primarily used for the particular ambience they produce.

Examples of use of oil lamp
1. Perhaps fittingly, Turkey‘s Islamic–based party has a light bulb as its symbol, while Morocco‘s has an oil lamp.
2. In the corner is an idol of Dhanavantari, the Hindu god of health, garlanded with flowers and lit by an oil lamp.
3. A woman said the fire started from a wooden house where an oil lamp fell to the floor. «That’s where it all started,» she told reporters.
4. One evening early that year she visited and found him reading a translated Russian novel under the wavering light of an oil lamp.
5. Using a needle that moved in response to sound, the phonautograph etched sound waves into paper coated with soot from an oil lamp.