The poetic name or term for a drinking cup or goblet would be a chalice.
Knock knock. Who's there? Cup. Cup who? Cup o' Joe.
Consider two identical cups, one half-full of tea, the other half-full of milk. You take a teaspoon of milk from the milk cup and put it in the tea cup. Then you take a spoonful out of the tea cup and put it in the milk cup. Now: is there more tea in the milk cup, or more milk in the tea cup?
a hiccup
Tea is acid
a sugar cube
chalice
chalice
goblet is a cup without handle
chalice
The Latin word poculummeans "a drinking-vessel, cup, goblet, bowl, beaker."
a sort of cup
A goblet is just a fancy glass. It usually has a cup that holds the liquid, a narrow stem, and a wide base. It is often made of cut glass and used to hold water or wine.
A medieval goblet cup is a drinking vessel typically made of metal or precious materials like silver or gold. It has a stem and a bowl-shaped top for holding liquid, often used by nobility or wealthy individuals during the medieval period for feasting and special occasions.
A goblet A chalice
A goblet A chalice
goblet
The bride and groom take turns drinking wine from the Kiddush cup during the Jewish wedding ceremony.