kylix


Also found in: Dictionary, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia.
Related to kylix: Lekythos, corbelled
Graphic Thesaurus  🔍
Display ON
Animation ON
Legend
Synonym
Antonym
Related
  • noun

Synonyms for kylix

a shallow drinking cup with two handles

Synonyms

Related Words

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
'This doesn't mean the pieces aren't legally located on the market, but one may have to dig further.' In 2016 Charles Ede sold 'a particularly fine blackfigure kantharos' to a client in New York and, more recently, to Yale University, a red-figure kylix with Bacchic scenes on the outside and a tondo of a maenad attacking a satyr (Fig.
Formas Quantidade Skyphos 219 Pelike 2 Oinochoe 261 Lekythos 3 Kantharos 1 Hydria 3 Kylix 3 Total 492 Fonte: Elaboracao do autor, a partir de dados do Beazley Archive.
Attic red-figure kylix attributed to Makron with three pairs of courting couples, c.
The wine was consumed in a variety of vessels including the kylix, skyphos, kantharos and rhyton.
Figure 3, a red-figure kylix from the British Museum (E 38), shows a man listening to a woman perform on her aulos.
In addition, the Apache HTTP Server is redistributed through many proprietary software packages such as WebSphere, Oracle RDBMS, Kylix, NetWare, and Delphi, as well as numerous Linux distributions.
More than 200 exhibitors from 30 countries will participate in the Dubai International Horse Fair, with many new companies taking part this year including Alisul Alimentos, Equiliner, Horseliner, Karaman Veterinary, Kylix UK, Morovol, Point Two Jackets and Yueqing Gsport.
We thus cannot look at the most ancient objects - such as the magnificent golden goblet (the Dendra kylix with embossed hunting hound) or the Pentelic marble head of Paris - as though they were unconnected to a tradition that continues today.
2), a slender wine-pouring jug used to decant wine from a larger mixing vessel (such as the stamnos or krater) into a drinking cup (such as a kylix or skyphos).
On the front page was a brief report that the Metropolitan Museum had made a spectacular acquisition; its Director, Thomas Hoving, announced the purchase of a magnificent Attic sixth-century kylix krater, signed by the potter Euxitheos and the painter Euphronios.
(29) The left hand of the figure is preserved, grasping the stem of a kylix; on the wrist are the remains of a snake, which approaches the cup, presumably to drink from it.