Meaning of cantharuses | Babel Free
Examples
“Anise-sprinkled loaves alternated with great cheeses heavier than discuses, crateras filled with wine, and cantharuses filled with water, together with baskets of gold filigree work containing flowers.”
“The mention of cantharuses in the obscure line suggests that he made drinking cups.[…]and then I saw Hermaiscus smashing one of those immense cantharuses[…]but, my good fellow, they are not turning out at the pottery now those immense cantharuses, but nothing but low and hollow things”
“The baptistery has a floor decorated with eucharistic scenes: peacocks, deer and birds facing cantharuses full of water.”
“The pottery has few forms: bowls with conical and biconical profile, amphoras, cantharuses, lids, strainers, etc.”
“[…]preserved black and white mosaic floor there is a painting of the myth of Lycurgus and Ambrosia in a medallion and, at the corners, four cantharuses with vine tendrils which separate scenes regarding the harvesting of grapes.”
“Throughout the excavations a large number of fragments of cantharuses and skyphoses (two-handled cup-shaped vessels for drinking wine or beer) were discovered.[…]Especially attractive elements include the composite “Theodosian” capitals, the white marble figured capitals which were decorated with numerous peacocks, heads of bulls, sheep and birds in flight, and pines, cantharuses and leaves and tendrils of evergreen ivy combined with acanthus leaves.”
“Among the gifts by Pontiffs and Sovereigns there were a great number of precious lamps in gold and silver in the shape of cereostati, cornucopias, cantharuses, wicker baskets, crowns and dolphins.[…]The baptistry of this monumental church is decorated with a mosaic pavement which depicts Christian souls as peacocks, does and doves which, thirsting for the new truth, drink holy water from cantharuses.”
“There were whelks, cockles, scallops, tulips, cantharuses, conchs, ceriths, venuses;”
CEFR level
C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.