A silver goblet often holds wine in Christian ceremonies.
A normal bottle of wine holds 750ml and a magnum is double that ie 1500ml
flagon, it's a small pitcher used to hold the communion wine before it is poured into the chalice
In the Christian Eucharist, also called Communion and The Lord's Supper, the wine is in the Chalice and the bread is on the Paten.
6 Litres or 8 bottles
If you are referring to wine bottles this would be a magnum
A carafe is a common wine vessel that usually holds .75 L, which is about 25 oz. A pint is 16, so it's about a pint and a half. You may be thinking of something else though.
A standard bottle of wine holds 750 milliliters, and a typical wine flute holds about 150-200 milliliters. This means that a bottle can fill approximately 4 to 5 wine flutes, depending on how full you pour each glass. If you fill each flute to the standard serving size of 150 milliliters, you'll get about five servings.
The next size up from a magnum in terms of wine bottles is typically referred to as a "double magnum," which holds 3 liters of wine, equivalent to four standard wine bottles. In the context of champagne, the equivalent would be a "jeroboam," which also holds 3 liters. These larger formats are often used for special occasions and can enhance the aging potential of the wine.
No most of the time wine tasting is free. Wine tasting usually comes along with a variety of cheese and bread sampling too. A wine shop will usually advertise the time of day and where they're going to hold it at.
jerobaum Isn't it usually Jeroboam? JimmerDave
Actually, there is such a wide variety in the number of bottles of wine that average rack holds. Smaller racks can hold between 9-12 bottles where larger racks located in wine cellars can hold 100's of bottles.
I believe that a wine glass is just a more specific type of stemware. In this case then it depends on the specific type of stemware or wine glass as to which holds more fluid ounces.