Flint Glass - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: flint glassFlint glass
A soft heavy brilliant glass consisting essentially of a silicate of lead and potassium It is used for tableware and for optical instruments as prisms its density giving a high degree of dispersive power so called because formerly the silica was obtained from pulverized flints Called also crystal glass Cf Glass...
Litharge
Lead monoxide a yellowish red substance obtained as an amorphous powder or crystallized in fine scales by heating lead moderately in a current of air or by calcining lead nitrate or carbonate It is used in making flint glass in glazing earthenware in making red lead or minium etc Called also massicot...
minium
A heavy brilliant red pigment consisting of an oxide of lead Pb3O4 obtained by exposing lead or massicot to a gentle and continued heat in the air It is used as a cement as a paint and in the manufacture of flint glass Called also red lead lead tetroxide lead orthoplumbate mineral orange mineral red Paris red Saturn red and less definitively lead oxide...
Glass ware
Glass ware, the dictionary meaning of the expres-sion 'glass ware' is 'articles made of glass' (see WEBSTER'S NEW WORLD DICTIONARY).However, in commercial sense glass ware would never comprise articles like clinical syringes, thermometers, lectometers, and the like which have specialised significance and utility. In popular or commercial parlance a general merchant dealing in 'glass ware' does not ordinarily deal in articles like clinical syringes, thermometers, medical stores or with the manufacturers thereof like the assessee. It is equally unlikely that consumer would ask for such articles from a glass ware shop. In popular sense when one talks of glass ware such specialised articles like clinical syringes, thermometer, lectometers and the like do not come up to ones mind, Indo International Industries v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, AIR 1981 SC 1079 (1081): (1981) 2 SCC 528: (1981) 3 SCR 294. [U.P. Sales Tax, (15 of 1948)]...
Glass
Glass. By the (English) Larceny Act, 1916 (6 & 7 Geo. 5, c. 50), s. 81(1), every person who steals or with intent to steal breaks any glass belonging to any building, shall be guilty of a felony punishable as in the case of simple larceny.By (English) Carriers Act, 1830 (11 Geo. 4 and 1 Will. 4, c. 68), s. 1, a carrier is not liable for loss or damage above 10l. unless such glass has been declared and an increased charge accepted.As to deposit in streets and the power of making byelaws to prevent such a nuisance, see (English) Highways Act, 1835 (5 & 6 Will. 4, c. 50), s. 72; (English) Public Health (London) Act, 1891 (54 & 55 Vict. c. 76), s. 16; Public Health Act, 1875 (38 & 39Vict. c. 55), s. 171; (English) Town Police Clauses Act, 1847 (10 & 11 Vict. c. 89), s. 28. (English) Under Factories and Workshops Act, 1901 (1 Edw. 7, c. 22), 'Glass works' is a non-textile factory; see ss. 40, 78, regarding meals and meal-times in such works; as to night employment of persons of fourteen and...
Other glass and glassware
Other glass and glassware, screens for fitting in motor vehicles knows as wind screens and door screen are only motor vehicle parts and these are not glass and glassware, Atul Glass Industries v. C.C.E., AIR 1986 SC 1730. [Central Excise and Salt Act, (1 of 1994) Sch I, Tariff Item 23A(4) and 68]...
glassed
fitted or covered with glass as a glassed wall Opposite of unglazed...
Glassful
The contents of a glass as much of anything as a glass will hold...
Millefiore glass
Slender rods or tubes of colored glass fused together and embedded in clear glass used for paperweights and other small articles...
Claude Lorraine glass
A slightly convex mirror commonly of black glass used as a toy for viewing the reflected landscape...
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