Yes , there is wine in the Chalice , but that wine is turned into the blood of Jesus.
A wine chalice can be a goblet.
An old fashioned word for wine glass is a chalice. A chalice was a common word during the middle ages.
The Communion is in a ciborium and the wine is in a chalice.
No. A chalice is a goblet, especially one for wine. An innovation is something new that is created.
A chalice is a wine cup. It is used to symbolize the Disciples of Christ denomination and the Unitarian denomination.
The wine is held in the chalice until that moment at the consecration when it becomes the blood of Christ under the form of wine. It is still held in the chalice until communion. You may have it confused with the ciborium where the excess hosts (body of Christ) are held in the tabernacle.
Decanter or carafe
Holy wine is served in a sacred cup called a chalice in the Catholic herritage.
After a priest consecrates the bread and wine, then it is distributed to the people. First, the priest gives the bread. The parisioners wait. Then, the priest comes with the chalice and people either sip wine from the chalice or dip their bread into the wine. In between people sipping from the chalice, the priest wipes the lip of the chalice where the last person sipped. Some people believe it is more sanitary to dip the bread into the wine (rather than sipping from the cup after someone else).
The Holy Chalice.
If you are referring to the (usually) glass containers that the wine and water are poured out of into the chalice and used for the washing of the priests hands (respectively) then those are called 'cruets'.
the plate is called the paten and the cup is called the chalice