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Definition of metalware in English: metalwarenoun ˈmɛt(ə)lwɛːˈmedlˌwer mass nounalso metalwaresUtensils or other articles made of metal. 金属器皿;金属炊具 our shop specializes in antique metalware Example sentencesExamples - Our other great foible was hunting down British metalware imported into Morocco at the turn of the century.
- In general, Islamic metalware commanded high prices, and in Florence during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries it was on occasion even more highly prized than Chinese porcelain.
- In both pattern books and extant artifacts, quilted feathers resemble the gadrooned edgings of seventeenth-and eighteenth-century furniture and fine metalwares.
- The influence of Japanese metalwares is also evident in the use by American art brass firms of mixtures of plated and textured brass.
- The project has been recreating both the fabric of the building and things from his home, including furniture, textiles, glass, and metalware, using only medieval materials, tools, and techniques.
- This transition is evident in a previously unpublished set of ten watercolors of about 1800 by an unknown designer of artistic metalware in Paris.
- There will also be antique glass, china, furniture and metalware on display.
- Benson was the first to solve the problem of design in metal in the modern spirit when he created the lamps that were later to have a revolutionary effect on all our metalware.
- That city had long manufactured small metalwares in both iron and brass.
- Some rural African peoples worked primarily as sheep, cattle, and poultry raisers, and African artisans maintained a steady trade in clothing, baskets, pottery, and metalware, but farming was a way of life for most Africans.
- Occasional reliance on people outside the household who produced and repaired metalware and sold staples such as salt and lime linked relatively self-sufficient households to the developing market economy.
- Different varieties of metalware have been feasted, including crosses from Niger and Ethiopia and weapons from Gabon.
- This vast complex brought together seven hundred workmen in the organized production of various lines of metalwares.
- The exhibition anticipates the museum's new gallery of domestic metalware.
- Other common metalware found in the home also requires regular cleaning and likewise has specific cleaning needs.
- Military supplies, silks, porcelain, produce, tax silver, metalware, medicinal herbs, tribute goods, and all manner of merchandise poured into the capital from neighboring counties, distant provinces, and beyond the seas.
- The metalware, ceramics, glassware, and carpets he depicted were highly prized and costly, and to add them to a painting endowed it with greater value through their physical presence.
- The manorial village was never completely self-sufficient because salt, millstones or perhaps metalware were not available and had to be obtained from outside sources.
- His left hand supports a fluted tray with offerings of fruit and cakes near shoulder level, and his right hand holds a pitcher carved with crisp flutes that suggest metalware.
- The opportunity to redisplay the domestic metalware collections in London's Victoria and Albert Museum has led to a reassessment of the museum's historical lighting equipment.
Definition of metalware in US English: metalwarenounˈmedlˌwer Utensils or other articles made of metal. 金属器皿;金属炊具 our shop specializes in antique metalware Example sentencesExamples - Different varieties of metalware have been feasted, including crosses from Niger and Ethiopia and weapons from Gabon.
- Our other great foible was hunting down British metalware imported into Morocco at the turn of the century.
- The metalware, ceramics, glassware, and carpets he depicted were highly prized and costly, and to add them to a painting endowed it with greater value through their physical presence.
- Benson was the first to solve the problem of design in metal in the modern spirit when he created the lamps that were later to have a revolutionary effect on all our metalware.
- Occasional reliance on people outside the household who produced and repaired metalware and sold staples such as salt and lime linked relatively self-sufficient households to the developing market economy.
- The influence of Japanese metalwares is also evident in the use by American art brass firms of mixtures of plated and textured brass.
- That city had long manufactured small metalwares in both iron and brass.
- Some rural African peoples worked primarily as sheep, cattle, and poultry raisers, and African artisans maintained a steady trade in clothing, baskets, pottery, and metalware, but farming was a way of life for most Africans.
- His left hand supports a fluted tray with offerings of fruit and cakes near shoulder level, and his right hand holds a pitcher carved with crisp flutes that suggest metalware.
- There will also be antique glass, china, furniture and metalware on display.
- The project has been recreating both the fabric of the building and things from his home, including furniture, textiles, glass, and metalware, using only medieval materials, tools, and techniques.
- This transition is evident in a previously unpublished set of ten watercolors of about 1800 by an unknown designer of artistic metalware in Paris.
- Military supplies, silks, porcelain, produce, tax silver, metalware, medicinal herbs, tribute goods, and all manner of merchandise poured into the capital from neighboring counties, distant provinces, and beyond the seas.
- Other common metalware found in the home also requires regular cleaning and likewise has specific cleaning needs.
- In both pattern books and extant artifacts, quilted feathers resemble the gadrooned edgings of seventeenth-and eighteenth-century furniture and fine metalwares.
- In general, Islamic metalware commanded high prices, and in Florence during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries it was on occasion even more highly prized than Chinese porcelain.
- The exhibition anticipates the museum's new gallery of domestic metalware.
- The opportunity to redisplay the domestic metalware collections in London's Victoria and Albert Museum has led to a reassessment of the museum's historical lighting equipment.
- This vast complex brought together seven hundred workmen in the organized production of various lines of metalwares.
- The manorial village was never completely self-sufficient because salt, millstones or perhaps metalware were not available and had to be obtained from outside sources.
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