when you put tea in the cup, you then put the cup on the saucer to prevent tea from spilling onto the table or to protect the table from the cup. And it makes carrying the cup a lot easier. try tea with biscuits for an english touch :)
It is a saucer.
A saucer
I have both the cup and saucer yes.
Java is slang for coffee. The cup and saucer represent a cup of coffee, or java.
You should place a saucer under the cup to catch any spills. The term 'flying saucer' comes from the plate-like appearance of some UFOs. The cat is happy to get a saucer of milk in the morning. Seldom, people claim to see a flying saucer.
It's for stability. The groove usually matches exactly with a cup from the same tea set. it's designed to keep the cup on the saucer.
because the interracial porportions in the cup are virtually stronger in the cup, but the saucer has more optical durability, so the coffe sees the saucer and goes, "dang that saucer be pim ping" but it is too much for the coffe to handle, therefor the coffee cools down quicker than in the cup
In India people pour tea out of their tea cup into the saucer as a way to cool down the tea and also as a way to split a cup between two people . The design of a cup and saucer is derived from a Chinese brewing cup that featured a bottom plate.
The value of a Rosina bone chine cup and saucer is between $15 and $50 USD. A set of a cup and saucer have more value than a single piece, but a collection of cups and saucers has the most value.
· saucer
saucer
Made in Occupied Japan Wako teacup and saucer