A simple tube of thin glass, closed at one end, for heating solutions and for performing ordinary reactions.
With these are associated certain plain spheres of thin glass of various colours, which may have been used as balls by jugglers, as mentioned in a passage in one of Seneca's letters.
Edward Lane describes the small conical lamps of thin glass 'having a little tube at the bottom in which is stuck a wick twisted round a piece of straw.
He found that ‘a thick plate of glass, though as much or more permeable to light than a thin glass of worse quality, allowed a much smaller quantity of radiant heat to pass.
This is easily effected in a thin glass flask; but the moment it is agitated, it becomes a firm mass.
A thick glass, though as much or more permeable to light than a thin glass of worse quality, allows a much smaller quantity of radiant heat to pass.
Shake well; strain into tall, thin glass; fill with Apollinaris and serve.
Thin glass is to be purchased at any optician's, and if cut in squares, instead of circles, is very much cheaper, and quite as useful for all practical purposes.
As may be seen by the figure and section, it consists of an inner tube with a thick glass, and an outer tube with a thin glass.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "thin glass" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.