. . . . . "Porbandar"@es . "1911 Encyclop\u00E6dia Britannica/Porcelain"@es . "Porcelain on CeraWiki"@es . . . . "Porch"@es . "Porcelain"@es . "400px|thumb 1911 Encyclop\u00E6dia Britannica/Header PORCELAIN, the name of that kind of ceramic ware which is characterized by a translucent body, also loosely used for the finer kinds of ware generally, popularly known as \u201Cchina\u201D (see CERAMICS). The French porcelain, from which the word comes into English, is an adaptation of the Italian porcellana, a cowrie-shell, the beautifully polished surface of which caused the name to be applied to the ware. The Italian word is generally taken to be from porcella, diminutive of porco, pig, from a supposed resemblance of the shell to a pig's back. \n* Este art\u00EDculo incorpora texto de la Encyclop\u00E6dia Britannica de 1911 (dominio p\u00FAblico).Categor\u00EDa:Enciclopedia Brit\u00E1nica (edici\u00F3n de 1911) \n* 15px|Colabora en Wikisource. Wikisource contiene el original de o sobre 1911 Encyclop\u00E6dia Britannica/Porcelain. En el cual se ha basado este art\u00EDculo."@es . . "400px|thumb 1911 Encyclop\u00E6dia Britannica/Header PORCELAIN, the name of that kind of ceramic ware which is characterized by a translucent body, also loosely used for the finer kinds of ware generally, popularly known as \u201Cchina\u201D (see CERAMICS). The French porcelain, from which the word comes into English, is an adaptation of the Italian porcellana, a cowrie-shell, the beautifully polished surface of which caused the name to be applied to the ware. The Italian word is generally taken to be from porcella, diminutive of porco, pig, from a supposed resemblance of the shell to a pig's back."@es .