Samovar
A russian teapot is called a samovar
A metal, Russian urn used for heating water for making tea.
It's hard to believe, but T is the "tank". In Russian "tank" means a "танк".
Forty lobsters are required to fill a cooking urn, forty-four lobsters are required to fill a strong cooking urn, and sixty-five lobsters are required to fill a decorated cooking urn. Lobsters will fill 2.53% of the urn when used with a cooking urn, fill 2.29% of the urn when used with a strong cooking urn, and fill 1.55% of the urn when used with a decorated cooking urn. Lobsters cannot be used with a cracked cooking urn or a fragile cooking urn.
T. Deruguine has written: 'Russian-English glossary of statistical terms' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, Russian, Russian language, Statistics
When Ivo goes back with the urn, the urn;Studds, Steel, Read and Tylecote return, return;The welkin will ring loud,The great crowd will feel proud,Seeing Barlow and Bates with the urn, the urn;And the rest coming home with the urn.
T. A. Sofiano has written: 'English-Russian geological dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Geology, Russian, Russian language
lets see URN= you are in
tsar
Its called an urn
Keats means that the urn is an urn from Attica. A region in ancient greece.