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Definition of Milk glass
1. Noun. A milky white translucent or opaque glass.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Milk Glass
Literary usage of Milk glass
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Chemistry in Daily Life by Lassar-Cohn (1913)
"LECTURE X Glass—Glass mirrors—Potash and soda glass—Quartz glass—Strass— Artificial
precious stones—Ruby glass—milk glass—Clay—Bricks— Mortars—Lime ..."
2. Chemistry in Daily Life: Popular Lectures by Lassar Cohn (1896)
"milk glass.—Clay.—Bricks.—Mortars.—Glazing.— Pottery.—Stoneware.—Majolica
ware.—Porcelain.—Photography.—Lunar caustic.—Chloride, bromide, and iodide of ..."
3. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1913)
"The stimulus was rendered liminal by letting the light pass from the colored
paper through a sheet of milk glass, matt on one side, placed at such a ..."
4. Laboratory Equipment for Psychological Experiments by Charles Hubbard Judd (1907)
"This can be readily done as follows: Provide a box, one face of which consists
of a milk glass which will distribute the light falling upon it as uniformly ..."
5. Practical Gynecology: A Comprehensive Text-book for Students and Physicians by Edward Emmet Montgomery (1903)
"Milk-glass Specula, by rotating the instrument. When this procedure fails, it
may be drawn into the field by a tenaculum. If the cervix is large, ..."