चीनी मिट्टी की बनी वस्तु Meaning in English
चीनी मिट्टी की बनी वस्तु शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : ceramic
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
सिरेमिकसिरेमिक उद्योग
चीनी मिट्टी का मर्तबान
चीनी मिट्टी के सामान की अलमारी
सिरेमिकिस्ट्स
चीनी मिट्टी के बर्तन
सेराटोडस
सेराटोसॉरस
अनाज़ और सब्जियों की रसा
दलहन
सेरिबैलम
प्रमस्तिष्कीय
मस्तिष्कप्रान्तस्था संबंधी
सेरिब्रल
प्रमस्तिष्क जलसेतु
चीनी-मिट्टी-की-बनी-वस्तु इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Nanophase ceramics usually are more ductile and less brittle than regular ceramics.
The earliest settled villages in the region date to the ceramic Neolithic (c.
This involved the movement of finished goods and raw materials, including chank shell, lapis lazuli, turquoise, and ceramics.
Originally a ceramics manufacturing centre, the area is now mostly residential, including a number of schools.
On the exterior, Middle Eastern motifs were carried out in colored brick, slate, ceramic tile and especially stenciling.
The eclectic assortment of furniture and decorative arts includes carpets, metalwork, ceramics and costumes from the Middle East, folk art and fine art from Mexico, and high-style American and Oriental furniture.
A pressure-tube design, where the core is divided up into smaller tubes for each fuel channel, has potentially fewer issues here, as smaller diameter tubing can be much thinner than massive single pressure vessels, and the tube can be insulated on the inside with inert ceramic insulation so it can operate at low (calandria water) temperature.
ASTM has a number of other gloss-related standards designed for application in specific industries including the old 45° method which is used primarily now used for glazed ceramics, polyethylene and other plastic films.
Remnants of their culture include ceramic vessels and large numbers of baked-clay figures.
The town was a sanctuary and metal-working centre, ringed by smelting furnaces built against the exterior of the city walls, whose successive rebuildings, dated by ceramics from the Late Bronze Age, sixteenth century BCE, to the fifth century BCE, accumulated as a tell based on a low natural hill.
Unlike some other destroyed sites, Deir Alla's habitation continued after the disaster, without a break, into the Iron Age; the discontinuity was a cultural one, with highly developed pottery of a separate ceramic tradition post-dating the destruction.
Excavations in the Roman Forum resulted in the discovery of ceramics from the 9th and 10th centuries.
Prehistoric mirrors often have decorated backs, but are usually made of reflective materials rather than ceramic, although proponents of the mirror theory suggest that filled with water or oil, these objects could function as mirrors.