कैराफे Meaning in English
कैराफे शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : carafe
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
कैराफ्सकैराघेन
कैराकोलिंग
काराॅलेज
कैरमेल
कर्मेल
कैरामेल
कारमेलिज
कारमेल रोटी
कारमेलाइज्ड
कारमेलिज्ड
कैरामाइनर्स
कैरनकल
कैरंकस
कारापाल
कैराफे इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Coffee carafes used with drip coffee makers, e.
Black and Decker models, have markings for both water and brewed coffee as the carafe is also used for measuring water prior to brewing.
A 12-cup carafe, for example, has markings for 4, 6, 8, 10, and 12 cups of water or coffee, which correspond to of water or of brewed coffee respectively, the difference being the volume absorbed by the coffee grounds and lost to evaporation during brewing.
("He also painted [for Cardinal Del Monte] a young man, playing the Lute, who seemed altogether alive and real with a carafe of flowers full of water, in which you could see perfectly the reflection of a window and other reflections of that room inside the water, and on those flowers there was a lively dew depicted with every exquisite care.
The carafe is a "cut-and-paste" motif from another image, where the main light came from a window at more or less the same level as the carafe itself.
By contrast, the Hermitage version is more cursory in the drapery, less insistent in the detail, and it does not have the magnificent reflections in the carafe, which were specific to the alchemical context of the original.
The flowers are scattered with dewdrops as Baglione remarks, and the carafe of water reflects the window and other features of the room.
The idea of "correspondences" that informed so much of contemporary natural philosophy, means that the globe of the carafe with its reflections, like a crystal ball, would have been seen as a parallel with the celestial globe on the ceiling with the Elements above.
Elements of the composition of the Apollo Lute Player are repeated not only in the Hermitage work (with several counterpoint variations), but also in the glass carafe in the lower part of the two paintings A Boy bitten by a Lizard, most especially in the version in the National Gallery, London.
It was a painting described as a carafe of flowers, two palmi high, which was bought at the 1628 sale of the Del Monte collection in a lot that included the Musicians, but it has not been heard of since.
On a stone table in front of him is a bowl of fruit and a large carafe of red wine.