释义 |
Ting, n.3|dɪŋ, tɪŋ| Also Ding. a. The name of a county in Hebei province, China, used attrib. to designate a type of white porcelain first made there during the Tang dynasty and perfected during the Song dynasty. b. Ting-yao, the name of a kiln in this county, used attrib. and absol. to denote the porcelain made there.
1904E. Dillon Porcelain v. 67 In the Ting yao of the Sung dynasty..we have the oldest type of an important class of porcelain. 1915R. L. Hobson Chinese Pott. & Porc. I. iv. 51 Many of the white Ting wares are thin enough to be translucent. 1933Burlington Mag. June 265/1 The standard Ting ware was white..porcelain, which was either perfectly plain or decorated with free⁓hand carved designs. 1953B. Gray Early Chinese Pott. & Porc. v. 31 To return to the Ting wares. The most characteristic Ting shape is a conical bowl on a small foot. 1958W. Willetts Chinese Art II. vi. 446 North is Ting Chou and the district where Ting wares are supposed to have originated. 1971L. A. Boger Dict. World Pott. & Porc. 343/2 As a rule the Ting bowls had a raw edge, as though placed in the furnace in an inverted position. 1972Times 30 May 11/2 (Advt.), A carved ting yao plate. 1980Catal. Fine Chinese Ceramics (Sotheby, Hong Kong) 32 A small Ding (Ting) Ware bowl with curved sides, freely carved with a lotus blossom in the interior. |