salt cellar - translation to greek
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salt cellar - translation to greek

LOW, WIDE TABLE SALT CONTAINER POPULAR BEFORE SALT SHAKERS
Saltcellar; Salt-Cellar; Salt-box; Salt Cellar; Standing salt; Salt bowl; Salt cellars; Salt-cellar
  • Open salt dish, pressed glass; [[Boston and Sandwich Glass Company]], 1830–1835.
  • Formal place setting for a 12 course dinner; individual salt cellar at top of place setting.
  • A pair of George IV Irish silver Chinoiserie salt cellars,  by William Nowlan, Dublin, 1825.
  • Salt Cellar]], made for [[Francis I of France]], 1540–1543. Gold, partly enameled, with an ebony base. Depicts Earth and Sea personified.

salt cellar         
αλατιέρα
salt works         
  • [[San Francisco Bay]] salt ponds
SHALLOW ARTIFICIAL POND DESIGNED TO EXTRACT SALTS FROM SEA WATER OR OTHER BRINES
Salt evaporation ponds; Salt pan (evaporation); Salt pan(evaporation); Salt works; Salt panning; Salt farm; Salt panner; Salt farming; Solar evaporation
αλατωρυχείο
wine cellar         
  • Sonoma]] wine cellar
  • Wine bottles stored in a wine cellar at [[Jesus College, Oxford]]
  • Muga Wine cellar, Haro,Spain
  • [[Mileștii Mici]] has the world's biggest wine cellars.
  • Wine cellar of [[Schramsberg Vineyards]], Napa
  • Tasting]] room of [[port wine]] in a wine cellar of a producer
  • A [[sherry]] solera over the ground
  • Runcu - Romania]]
STORAGE ROOM FOR WINE WHERE WINE IS SOMETIMES SOLD
Winecellar; Wine Cellar; Wine room; Wine closet; Wine cellars
κάβα, οιναποθήκη, κελλάρι

Definition

salt cellar
(salt cellars)
A salt cellar is a small container for salt with a hole or holes in the top for shaking salt onto food. (BRIT; in AM, use salt shaker
)
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Salt cellar

A salt cellar (also called a salt, salt-box and a salt pig) is an article of tableware for holding and dispensing salt. In British English, the term is normally used for what in North American English are called salt shakers. Salt cellars can be either lidded or open, and are found in a wide range of sizes, from large shared vessels to small individual dishes. Styles range from simple to ornate or whimsical, using materials including glass and ceramic, metals, ivory and wood, and plastic.

Use of salt cellars is documented as early as classical Rome. They continued to be used through the first half of the 20th century; however, usage began to decline with the introduction of free-flowing salt in 1911, and at last they have been almost entirely replaced by salt shakers.

Salt cellars were an early collectible as pieces of silver, pewter, glass, etc. Soon after their role at the table was replaced by the shaker, salt cellars became a popular collectible in their own right.

Examples of use of salt cellar
1. "We‘ve worked hard to adapt our recipes so that consumers won‘t simply be reaching for the salt cellar.
2. The stamps include landmarks, from St Paul‘s Cathedral to the 300 million–year–old Salt Cellar, a gritstone rock in the Peak District.
3. Even in a form in which plausibility lay on the table like an empty salt cellar, Silliphant went too far with The Swarm (1'78), in which the threat to humanity came from killer bees.
4. As their main courses arrived, the slightly taller of the two opened his mouth to speak, but before he could utter a word his companion had already handed him the salt cellar.
5. Also included on the list are Cezanne‘s "View of Auvers–sur–Oise;" Leonardo‘s "Madonna of the Yarnwinder;" Benvenuto Cellini‘s "Salt Cellar;" Caravaggio‘s "Nativity;" between 7,000 and 10,000 looted or stolen Iraqi artifacts; and 12 pieces from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum (including three more Rembrandts) worth an estimated $300 million. (Wolf Blitzer on how the museum tried to retrieve its artwork in March) The FBI hopes its Top 10 list will increase the visibility of its Art Crime Team, yielding more leads and tips to recover the art, Swecker said.