SALTCELLAR - traducción al árabe
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SALTCELLAR - traducción al árabe

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.

SALTCELLAR         

ألاسم

مَمْلَحَة

saltcellar         
N
المملحة
salt cellar         
مَلاَّحَة مائدة

Definición

Saltcellar
·noun Formerly a large vessel, now a small vessel of glass or other material, used for holding salt on the table.

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.

Ejemplos de uso de SALTCELLAR
1. ‘Inspirational‘ new director for Royal Court Archaeologists reveal chapel where Henry VIII married his wives Arctic Monkeys‘ debut puts Oasis in the shade Paris braced for Michael Haneke‘s ‘mystery‘ Mozart In short From the trades Believe it: record six NME nominations for Kaiser Chiefs NME award nominations in full They are not alone Luke Harding: Strange case of the 35m saltcellar ITV sounds out rival to Top of the Pops As another bronze is stolen, police fear treasures are going for scrap Twenty sculptures go missing around London Increasing demand for copper behind thefts Owen Bowcott Wednesday January 25, 2006 The Guardian A huge, modernist sculpture has disappeared from a university campus in west London, heightening fears that monumental bronzes are being targeted by thieves cashing in on booming scrap metal prices.
2. Presumably, they could not be sold through any of the top tier auction houses or into a museum collection so it will make it very hard to get proper value for these items ever." Lost and found 7,000–10,000 Iraqi artifacts, 2003 12 paintings stolen in 1''0 from Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Two Renoirs and a Rembrandt stolen from Sweden‘s National Museum, 2000 (recovered) Munch‘s Scream, and Madonna Benvenuto Cellini‘s Saltcellar from Vienna museum, 2003 Caravaggio‘s Nativity from Palermo, 1'6' Davidoff–Morini Stradivarius violin from New York apartment, 1''5 Two Van Gogh paintings from Amsterdam museum, 2002 Cezanne‘s View of Auvers–sur–Oise from Oxford‘s Ashmolean, 1''' Da Vinci‘s Madonna of the Yarnwinder, 2003