| frit |
A powder used to coat the mandrel when making glass beads to promote the release of the glass from the mandrel after the glass cools and hardens.
Ãâó: www.suncountrygems.com/glossary.html
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|---|---|
| frit |
Small granules of glass ranging from fine powder to rock-salt size.
Ãâó: www.evenheat-kiln.com/technical/glassgloss/glassgl...
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| frit |
Ground up bits of colored glass varying in consistency from fine sand-like particles to coarse chunks. It is used as an applied decoration.
Ãâó: www.urbansky.com/glossary.html
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| frit |
Some of the ingredients used in making glass, such as sand and alkali, pre-heated in a calcar but not completely melted or fused. Ground into a powder or grain and added to final ingredients in the crucible.
Ãâó: www.guadalupeglass.com/Glossary.html
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| Fritz |
Leading engineer in Nazi Germany after 1935. Espoused culture-determined technology.
Ãâó: www.udmercy.edu/faculty_pages/staudenmaier_sj/ethi...
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| frit | western United States herb with scarlet and yellow narrow bell-shaped flowers |
|---|---|
| frit | butterfly with brownish wings marked with black and silver |
| frit | any liliaceous plant of the genus Fritillaria having nodding variously colored flowers |
| frit | Italian omelet with diced vegetables and meats |
| frit | small quantity of fried batter containing fruit or meat or vegetables |
| frit | spend frivolously and unwisely |
| frit | spend frivolously and unwisely |
| frit | batter for making fritters |
| frit | United States biochemist (born in Germany) noted for his studies of metabolic processes (1899-1986) |
| frit | German chemist noted for the synthetic production of ammonia (1868-1934) |
| frit | United States violinist (born in Austria) (1875-1962) |
| frit | German physicist (1882-1974) |
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