Glass

Da Wikimedia Commons, l'archivio di file multimediali liberi
Vai alla navigazione Vai alla ricerca
Afrikaans: Glas
 ·
العربية: زجاج
 ·
مصرى: ازاز
 ·
Aragonés: Bidre
 ·
Avañe'ẽ: Itavera
 ·
Bahasa Indonesia: Kaca
 ·
Bahasa Melayu: Kaca
 ·
Беларуская: Шкло
 ·
Bosanski: Staklo
 ·
Български: Стъкло
 ·
Català: Vidre
 ·
Čeština: Sklo
 ·
Cymraeg: Gwydr
 ·
Dansk: Glas
 ·
Deutsch: Glas
 ·
Eesti: Klaas
 ·
Ελληνικά: Γυαλί
 ·
English: Glass
 ·
Español: Vidrio
 ·
Esperanto: Vitro
 ·
Euskara: Beira
 ·
فارسی: شیشه
 ·
Français : Verre
 ·
Galego: Vidro
 ·
한국어: 유리
 ·
Hrvatski: Staklo
 ·
Ido: Vitro
 ·
Íslenska: Gler
 ·
Italiano: Vetro
 ·
עברית: זכוכית
 ·
Kiswahili: Kioo
 ·
Kurdî: Cam
 ·
Latina: Vitrum
 ·
Latviešu: Stikls
 ·
Lietuvių: Stiklas
 ·
Lombard: Véder
 ·
Magyar: Üveg
 ·
Македонски: Стакло
 ·
Napulitano: Vrito
 ·
Nederlands: Glas
 ·
日本語: ガラス
 ·
Norsk bokmål: Glass
 ·
Norsk nynorsk: Glas
 ·
Occitan : Veire
 ·
Ирон: Авг
 ·
Polski: Szkło
 ·
Português: Vidro
 ·
Română: Sticlă
 ·
Runa Simi: Q'ispillu
 ·
Русский: Стекло
 ·
Sicilianu: Vitru
 ·
Slovenčina: Sklo
 ·
Slovenščina: Steklo
 ·
Српски / srpski: Стакло
 ·
Srpskohrvatski / српскохрватски: Staklo
 ·
Suomi: Lasi
 ·
Svenska: Glas
 ·
Tagalog: Salamin
 ·
தமிழ்: கண்ணாடி
 ·
తెలుగు: గాజు
 ·
ไทย: แก้ว
 ·
Tiếng Việt: Thủy tinh
 ·
Türkçe: Cam
 ·
اردو: شیشہ
 ·
Vèneto: Véro
 ·
ייִדיש: גלאז
 ·
Українська: Скло
 ·
Žemaitėška: Stėklos
 ·
粵語: 玻璃
 ·
中文:玻璃
 ·
English: Glass is a uniform amorphous solid material, usually produced by cooling a molten material very rapidly, thereby not giving enough time for a regular crystal lattice to form. Common glasses used as a building, container or decorative material are silica-based. The formal definition of glass is "a non-crystalline solid that presents the glass-transition effect."

See also Glass (vessel).

Glass in history[modifica]

Different uses[modifica]

Glass in art[modifica]

Technic aspects[modifica]

Refraction[modifica]

Others[modifica]