IRON KITCHEN TABLE AND CHAIRS : IRON KITCHEN TABLE
Iron kitchen table and chairs : 72 round glass table : Curved glass table.
Iron Kitchen Table And Chairs
a table in the kitchen
A kitchen is a room or part of a room used for cooking and food preparation.
Carry (someone) aloft in a chair or in a sitting position to celebrate a victory
(chair) professorship: the position of professor; "he was awarded an endowed chair in economics"
(chair) a seat for one person, with a support for the back; "he put his coat over the back of the chair and sat down"
Act as chairperson of or preside over (an organization, meeting, or public event)
(chair) act or preside as chair, as of an academic department in a university; "She chaired the department for many years"
a heavy ductile magnetic metallic element; is silver-white in pure form but readily rusts; used in construction and tools and armament; plays a role in the transport of oxygen by the blood
Smooth (clothes, sheets, etc.) with an iron
press and smooth with a heated iron; "press your shirts"; "she stood there ironing"
cast-iron: extremely robust; "an iron constitution"
Iron
Iron spells death, and death deliverance. The iron core grows like a cancer in the heart of the star, damping nuclear reactions in all that it touches, until the star becomes fatally imbalanced and falls victim to a general collapse. If the mass of the core is a tenth to two or three times that of the sun — here we draw on research by Gamow, Baade, Robert Oppenheimer, Fritz Zwicky, and others — the core rapidly crystallizes into a steely sphere, a "neutron star." Smooth as a ball bearing and smaller than a city but as massive as the sun, a neutron star spins rapidly on its axis and emits pulses of radio energy as it spins, creating a beacon of the sort that betrayed the locations of Tycho's and Kepler's supernovae. It resembles nothing so much as a giant atomic nucleus — as if the real business of the star, the conjuring of nuclei, was now at last monumentalized as a colossal nuclear tombstone.
—Timothy Ferris, Chapter 14, "The Evolution of Atoms and Stars" from Coming of Age in the Milky Way
Iron
The traditional coal iron used to put your cotton clothes straight, from the ironing lady next door.