- The
cotylae are also
features on the
proximal end of the
radius and of the ulna in birds. In
classical antiquity, the
cotyla or
cotyle (from
Ancient Gr****...
-
above the lip of the pot. The Gr****
words kotylos (κότῦλος, masculine) and
kotyle (κοτύλη, feminine) are
other ancient names for this same shape. The kantharos...
-
evidence for the
symposium in the Gr**** world. The cup is a
skyphos or
kotyle decorated in the
Geometric style, 10.3 cm (4.1 in) in
height and with a...
- ἡμικοτύλη 3
kyathoi 136.4 mL (4.61 US fl oz; 4.80 imp fl oz)
Roman quartarius kotylē,
tryblion or hēmina κοτύλη, τρύβλιον, ἡμίνα 6
kyathoi 272.8 mL (9.22 US fl oz;...
- from κοτυληδών (kotulēdṓn), gen. κοτυληδόνος (kotulēdónos), from κοτύλη (
kotýlē) 'cup, bowl') is a
significant part of the
embryo within the seed of a plant...
- lions.
Beside the aryballos, the
kotyle and the
alabastron are the most
important vase shapes. The
edges of
kotyles were ornamented, and the
other decorations...
- to
separate genera. The
genus name
Cotylorhynchus comes from the Gr****
kotyle, cup, hollow, and rhynchos, beak, or snout. The
genus was
named so because...
-
alongside roads, and in fields. The name "cotula" is the
Latin form of κοτύλη
kotylē, the Gr**** word for "small cup",
describing the
shape of the flowers; it...
- ogkía (ὀγκία) ougkía (οὐγκία) 1⁄12 0.1824 (=Roman uncia)
Cotyla Half-xesta
kotýlē (κοτύλη) hēmixéstion (ἡμιξέστιον) 1⁄8 0.276 (=Roman half-****tarius) Xesta...
- One of the
oldest known Gr**** inscriptions, from "Nestor's Cup", a
kotyle from the
final third of the 8th
century BC....