Subj : Some observations To : alexander koryagin From : Paul Quinn Date : Fri Jul 06 2018 22:01:02 Hi! Alexander, On 16/04/14 17:51, you wrote: PQ>> I have seen this 'ritual', in at least one film. The use of a ak> Do Russians like flowers on china saucers? ;-) I cannot be certain. I do (like flowers on them). ak> In Russia we also produce china caps. Such a cap always has a handle. So ak> it is more difficult to produce it. In hard time, especially after WW2 ak> when all utensils were broken :) glasses and saucers (and tea spoons) ak> became the main mean for tea drinking. Caps? China cups. Yes. I used to have my own (favourite) tea cup and saucer in my teenaged years. ak> It must be said that there also was another tea set. It consisted of a ak> glass (with a teaspoon) and a special metal glass holder (podstakannik ak> in Russian). It has been widely used in trains, canteens etc. A waiter ak> takes a tea tray, puts glasses on it, in glass holders, and carries it ak> along the train, canteen etc. As you can see if they would use glasses ak> with saucers they could carry much less glasses per one tray. I have seen this metal glass holder at least once in a film. I've spotted its use at the 33 minute mark in the 'The Hunt for Red October' movie from 1990. I have seen such things used in other films as well. E.g. I suspect a senior Police official may have been using one in the 'Gorky Park' film from 1983 but I don't have a copy to check. Yes, I can imagine that a cup holder would essentially turn a glass into a shape similar to a coffee cup. Such things would be more useful, and less awkward, than cups & saucers. Thanks again, Alexander. Cheers, Paul. --- Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:17.0) Gecko/20130330 Thunderbird/17.0.5 * Origin: news://felten.yi.org (2:203/2) .