saltcellar การใช้
- Above the plate is a saltcellar, nut dish, and a menu.
- The extra sodium nitrite in the salt in a table saltcellar could provide this.
- They test the saltcellars and find one that contains enough to poison the men.
- O'Neill's only defense during the attack was to hurl a saltcellar at Fr.
- If all the men had used this saltcellar, this could be the cause of their poisoning.
- From the same period comes John Ruskin's set of eight saltcellars with shell-bowled spoons.
- Redesigned as a more conventional glass-sheathed skyscraper, one writer described it as a " giant saltcellar " with a hollow core.
- This is a play, in part, about playwriting, a theme underscored in Cellini's beautiful speech describing one of his finest achievements, an ornate saltcellar commissioned by Francois I of France.
- From the ceremonial point of view-in royal baptisms-seven of them were entrusted to deliver the sacred ornaments for the sacrament ( saltcellar, water-jug, cottons, brush etc . ).
- These are decorative panels, caskets, boxes, various sets of kitchen stuff, such as hardboards, bread bins, saltcellars, etc ., as well as children furniture and toys, including the most popular painted rocking horse.
- This presentation set included goblets, champagne glasses, wine glasses, claret glasses, green-tinted hock glasses, cordial glasses, quart-and pint-size decanters, claret decanters, bowls, side dishes, finger bowls, and saltcellars.
- With crystal wine glasses costing a minimum of $ 20 apiece and little silver saltcellars as much as $ 240, and scores of cooks and waiters required for the service that people expect for their fistfuls of money, the restaurant business is not as profitable as it used to be.
- One or more thieves reached on a scaffolding the second floor of the museum, smashed a window and a glass showcase and removed the 26-centimeter ( 10-inch ) sculpted " saliera " or saltcellar, a small container for holding salt, the Austria Press Agency reported.
- According to the Austria Press Agency, one or more thieves reached on a scaffolding the first ( U . S . second ) floor of the museum, smashed a window and a glass showcase and removed the 26-centimeter ( 10-inch ) sculpted " saliera " or saltcellar.