View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Beaker.
Beaker meaning
A flat-bottomed, straight-sided, glass vessel, with a lip and often a small spout, used as a laboratory container. | A drinking vessel without a handle. | A mug.
Example sentences (20)
For example, if the sample is a dilute solute dissolved in water in a beaker, then a good reference measurement might be to measure pure water in the same beaker.
The included beaker is good quality, holds three cups, and comes with a nice top for storage purposes.
The representative of the state handed me a beaker of liquid thorazine.
The Bluetooth-enabled beaker comes with a “charging coaster” and allows the drinker to remotely programme a particular temperature for their beverage.
She also explained each step to the audience, as foam exploded upward from each beaker.
This mixing was integral to the next step in the journey of these people as they used the sea-faring knowledge obtained from the Beaker people to cross the English Channel.
Last months researchers found the Beaker People almost wiped out the Neolithic farmers who built the Stonehenge 5,000 years ago.
Sadly, we all have to wake up and go to work eventually — so make sure your special someone always enjoys their morning coffee with this Beaker mug.
Application Fermenting a broth in a beaker has become more than just a way to prove that organisms don't just appear out of thin air.
C.M.Hogan, 2007 Pottery of the Beaker people has been found at both sites, dating to several centuries after copper-working began there.
Long exposure image of multi-bubble sonoluminescence created by a high-intensity ultrasonic horn immersed in a beaker of liquid Sonoluminescence is the emission of short bursts of light from imploding bubbles in a liquid when excited by sound.
Neutralization Hydrochloric acid (in beaker ) reacting with ammonia fumes to produce ammonium chloride (white smoke).
Pouring egg whites into a beaker of acetone will also turn egg whites translucent and solid.
Some cultures have retained the name applied to them in reference to characteristic forms, for lack of an idea of what they called themselves: "The Beaker People " in northern Europe during the 3rd millennium BCE, for example.
The Beaker culture appears to have spread copper and bronze technologies in Europe, along with Indo-European languages.
The Beaker culture displayed different behaviours from the earlier Neolithic people, and cultural change was significant.
The beaker prepared at left holds a detergent in water, forming micelles that will show the passage of a visible laser beam.
The Corded Ware and Bell Beaker cultures were not indigenous to the Netherlands but were pan-European in nature, extending across much of northern and central Europe.
The Iberomaurusian was succeeded by the Beaker culture in Morocco.
The southern region became dominated by the Hilversum culture (1800–800 BC), which apparently inherited cultural ties with Britain of the previous Barbed-Wire Beaker culture.