Teapoy

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File:Teapoy with four oval tea caddies MET DP-14129-169.jpg
An antique four-legged British teapoy in the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Template:Sister project A teapoy is an item of furniture. The word is of Indian origin, and was originally used to describe a three-legged table, literally meaning "three feet" in Hindi.[1]Template:Sfn

By erroneous association with the word "tea"[1] in the middle of the 19th century,Template:Sfn it is also used to describe a table with a container for tea, or a table for holding a tea service. In the 19th century, the word was also sometimes applied to a large porcelain or earthenware tea caddy, and more frequently to the small bottles, often of enamel, which fitted into receptacles in the caddy and actually contained the tea.[2]

Teapoys were small three-legged tables with a tabletop turning into a shallow box by 1820s that turned into a tea chest by the middle of the 19th century, at the same time woods (rosewood, mahogany, walnut) were supplemented by the papier-mâché, resulting in highly decorative designs with inlays of ivory and mother-of-pearl.Template:Sfn

See also

References

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  1. a b OED, teapoy, etymology: from Hindi tīn three + Persian. pāï foot.
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Sources

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