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tea urn การใช้

"tea urn" แปล  
ประโยคมือถือ
  • They produced a vast array of goods, from rails for wagonways to heaters for tea urns.
  • At one point, Angelica gave Jefferson a handsome silver tea urn, " a perfect beauty, " according to the recipient.
  • Angelica's note accompanying the tea urn said that while Maria's copy was better, she held a better likeness of Jefferson in her heart.
  • Earlier examples of water heaters using a water jacket include heavier samovar tea urns from Southeastern Europe, as well as the Middle East.
  • Brown broke his leg in three places in a scrum for the tea urn but was back up and climbing three months later.
  • A tea urn is a heated metal container traditionally used to brew tea or boil water in large quantities in factories, canteens or churches.
  • In short, you are causing a Category 5 hurricane in an industrial-sized tea urn . ( cont ) 15 : 46, 27 October 2016 ( UTC)
  • Even the city's production of samovars, or Russian tea urns, suffered badly _ and most of those made now are for export, too expensive for local residents.
  • Available accessories include a $ 2, 500 19th-century ceramic vase from the south of France and a $ 1, 500 Japanese Meiji-era ceramic tea urn from the 1870s.
  • When Prince Andrew, Duke of York visited the school to declare the new block officially open, the opening ceremony was interrupted by a fire alarm caused by a hot tea urn.
  • Some have speculated the recipes either derived from other Eastern European shortbread cookies, may have migrated to Mexico with European nuns, or may have been associated with cookies served beside Russian samovars ( tea urns ).
  • The tea urn, however, is empty, save for a card on which is written the book's last word : " Farewell " . ( In the last picture, the three stand facing a setting sun .)
  • Spencer did not depict heroism and sacrifice, but rather in panels such as " Scrubbing the Floor ", " Bedmaking ", " Filling Tea Urns " and " Sorting and Moving Kit Bags ", the unremarkable everyday facts of daily life in camp or hospital and a sense of human companionship rarely found in civilian life as he remembered events from Beaufort, Macedonia and Tweseldown Camp.