[
US
/ˈwɛdʒˌwʊd/
]
NOUN
- English potter (1730-1795)
- a type of pottery made by Josiah Wedgwood and his successors; typically has a classical decoration in white on a blue background
How To Use Wedgwood In A Sentence
- Josiah Wedgwood brought this ware to a high state of development and in 1763 named it Queensware for Queen Charlotte.
- Wedgwood plate from good china shops and department stores; bread and butter plate, £19.95; oval platter, £28.95.
- Andrew McClintock raised his eyes to the ceiling, seeming to survey the delicate moulding, the Wedgwood medallions. THE AMBASSADOR'S WOMEN
- They started with eight-inch-square biscuit blanks made by Wedgwood or Minton, Hollins and Company and preferred vitreous paint applied with brushes, palette knives, or their fingers.
- Wedgwood is now corrected (and I learned something I didn’t know … now wondering why they don’t have a second E …); thanks, Walt! HOLIDAY PARTY SUBJUNCTIVE • by Kevin Jewell
- The ceramics of Josiah Wedgwood and Josiah Spode also date back to that time.
- A dexter mens white gold wedding band sine potshot upon the slaughterhouse of the kuvasz or ploughwright from osasco or salientian wedgwood. POWET.TV
- This is a logical move to reduce overcapacity, yet it deepened Waterford Wedgwood's exposure to ceramics and formal ware at a time when those products have fallen out of favour with consumers.
- Exhibits will include creative works that have won awards both nationally and internationally, as well as designs commissioned by major organisations such as Wedgwood, Breakthrough Breast Cancer and River Island. Archive 2008-05-01
- As a speaker, Sir John Wedgwood is much in demand and has appeared several times on the Brains Trust of the B. B.C.'s television program and has broadcast in Germany, Britain, Canada, New Zealand, Australia and the United States. Canadian TradeHandle With Care