Flacon

A bottle is usually composed of a cut-glass vessel with a narrow neck and a round shape as the abdomen, in which usually perfume is kept.

Etymology

The word itself comes from the French and was borrowed back in the 18th century the German after the West Germanic flasca (Gothic: FLASCO; bottle it later ) was first borrowed from Roman soldiers to the Roman name for a vessel.

Appearance

Bottles are available in any form, ie round, square, broad, swan way to acquire etc.. Bottles can have all sorts of colors. Is in Grimm's Dictionary of the bottle or vial as screws " with spirituous and fragrant things" as content and, more generally, regarded as vinaigrettes.

History

In the first two centuries AD, the Syrian glassmakers blew into molds glass containers, especially bottles, bowls and flasks, often decorated in relief with melted threads, but also with melted Egyptian ornaments.

In 1900, during the Belle Epoque, the perfume was a luxury item. From now on, it had a name and was in a bottle.

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