Dishes were made in China of a special clay found in the country. It is called Kaolin and it is the clay that porcelain is made out of. Porcelain is one of the most fragile of the pottery clays and is the most luminescent.
Porcelain
China's contributions included giving porcelain (porcelain china) and cloth.
If you are referring the first word "china" to porcelain, China was the birthplace of making porcelain. That's why porcelain is informally be referred to as "china" or "fine china" in some English-speaking countries
Porcelain was created in China and it mostly stayed in China giving it the name "China"
The Porcelain tower is in Nanking, China
Porcelain tableware originated in China, and China was the only country producing it until the 17th century - so it is still referred to as "china".
There is no such thing as "bone china glassware" or indeed "porcelain glassware".
porcelain provided the chines with a source of industry
No! Porcelain is a clay mixture fired in a kiln that is commonly called "china" because the mixture/process was first invented in that country. It is delicate and contains metallic elements that will heat up quickly and break the porcelain when in contact with heat. Also, porcelain china should not be used in a microwave because of the metal elements.
it is made in china
Purslain., A fine translucent or semitransculent kind of earthenware, made first in China and Japan, but now also in Europe and America; -- called also China, or China ware.