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CUP

Volume 3 · 279 words · 1778 Edition

a vessel of capacity of various forms and materials, chiefly to drink out of. In the Ephemer German, we have a description of a cup made of a common pepper-corn by Oswald Nerlinger; which holds 1200 other ivory cups, having each its several handle, all gilt on the edges; with room for 400 more.

Cup-Galls, in natural history, a name given, by authors, to a very singular kind of galls found on the leaves of the oak, and some other trees. They are of the figure of a cup, or drinking-glass, without its foot, being regular cones adhering by their point or apex to the leaf; and the top or broad part is hollowed a little way, so that it appears like a drinking-glass with a cover, which was made so small as not to close it at the mouth, but fall a little way into it. This cover is flat, and has in the centre a very small protuberance, resembling the nipple of a woman's breast. This is of a pale green, as is also the whole of the gall, excepting only its rim that runs round the top: this is of a scarlet colour, and that very beautiful. Besides this species of gall, the oak leaves furnish us with several others, some of which are oblong, some round, and others flattened; these are of various sizes, and appear on the leaves at various seasons of the year. They all contain the worm of some small fly; and this creature passes all its changes in this its habitation, being sometimes found in the worm, sometimes in the nymph, and sometimes in the fly-state, in the cavity of it.