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longxianchen
Senior Member
chinese
- Nov 24, 2015
- #1
Hi
Please look at the picture:
picture one
picture two
What do you call the covers of the cups please?
cap, lid, or just cover?
THANK you in advance
Last edited:
RM1(SS)
Senior Member
Connecticut
English - US (Midwest)
- Nov 24, 2015
- #2
I would call the black one a cap (mainly, I suppose, because it appears to screw on), and the white ones lids.
sdgraham
Senior Member
Oregon, USA
USA English
- Nov 24, 2015
- #3
RM1(SS) said:
I would call the black one a cap (mainly, I suppose, because it appears to screw on), and the white ones lids.
Likewise.
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longxianchen
Senior Member
chinese
- Nov 24, 2015
- #4
Thank you.
RM1(SS) said:
I would call the black one a cap (mainly, I suppose, because it appears to screw on), and the white ones lids.
But a pen cap is likely not to be screwed on, and we also call it cap.
And somebody told me that the black one is not even a cup but a thermos. Was he right?
RM1(SS)
Senior Member
Connecticut
English - US (Midwest)
- Nov 24, 2015
- #5
Could be a thermos, could be a travel mug.
sdgraham
Senior Member
Oregon, USA
USA English
- Nov 24, 2015
- #6
longxianchen said:
Thank you.
And somebody told me that the black one is not even a cup but a thermos. Was he right?
Since you are the one who provided the picture, we expect you to be able to tell us what it is.
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longxianchen
Senior Member
chinese
- Nov 24, 2015
- #7
In China, we usually call it vacuum cup. And we do screw the
cap(as RM1 said) on.
Corrado Prizzi
New Member
Helsinki
English
- Nov 24, 2015
- #8
English English:
She's always leaving the top off the toothpaste (tube).
Those cups have lids? Good idea!
Andygc
Senior Member
Devon
British English
- Nov 24, 2015
- #9
longxianchen said:
In China, we usually call it vacuum cup. And we do screw the
cap(as RM1 said) on.
If it is a flask and the top (BE), or cap (AE), is intended to be used to drink the contents of the flask, then the top, or cap, is a cup, whether or not it screws on. If it is a cup there would also usually be a separate top, or cap. As in AE, the tops on the cups are "lids" in BE.
Corrado Prizzi said: She's always leaving the top off the toothpaste (tube).
None of the containers illustrated is a toothpaste tube, so that isn't really relevant in this thread.
Hermione Golightly
Senior Member
London
British English
- Aug 27, 2019
- #11
I agree. Bottles have tops or corks and jars have lids.
JulianStuart
Senior Member
Sonoma County CA
English (UK then US)
- Aug 27, 2019
- #12
Yes, lids are usually bigger than caps but the picture seems to be illustrating the use of the word screw, and that you can screw ether a cap or a lid on or off the container. He is not not defining the item in the picture as a "lid or cap". Sometimes a cap snaps on sometimes it screws on. A lid often just sits on top of a jar (or even a box!) - sometimes it's a push fit, sometimes it screws.
zaffy
Senior Member
Polish
- Aug 27, 2019
- #13
JulianStuart said:
He is not not defining the item in the picture as a "lid or cap".
Actually, he referred to that bottle, and said you can use either one.
Anyway, speaking of a bottle that has a cap that can be twisted on/off, can such a cap be called a top as well? Any difference?
Attachments
JulianStuart
Senior Member
Sonoma County CA
English (UK then US)
- Aug 27, 2019
- #14
He could be referring to the bottle as an example of screwing but you've seen it, not me. For a bottle, top and cap can both work. I expect there are some people that also refer to it as a lid. I think some fo your recent threads are assuming that such precision of nomenclature is rigidly adhered to by all English speakers I suspect there are only a few versions of Polish and not a lot of variation in such nomenclature - so English is quite differtent and variable around the world.
Meerana
Senior Member
Arabic
- Oct 3, 2023
- #15
JulianStuart said:
He could be referring to the bottle as an example of screwing but you've seen it, not me. For a bottle, top and cap can both work. I expect there are some people that also refer to it as a lid. I think some fo your recent threads are assuming that such precision of nomenclature is rigidly adhered to by all English speakers
I suspect there are only a few versions of Polish and not a lot of variation in such nomenclature - so English is quite differtent and variable around the world.
So, to sum up, the first picture is a lid, and the second is a cover or a top, right?
Attachments
dojibear
Senior Member
Fresno CA
English (US - northeast)
- Oct 4, 2023
- #16
The first picture is a glass jar with a metal lid (or cap) on it.
The second picture is a bottle cap.
The terms "lid" and "cap" and "cover" all mean something that closes the top of an open container. Which exact word is used depend on:
1) the kind of container ("bottle/can/jar/jug")
2) the dialect saying this
Meerana
Senior Member
Arabic
- Oct 4, 2023
- #17
dojibear said:
The first picture is a glass jar with a metal lid (or cap) on it.
The second picture is a bottle cap.
The terms "lid" and "cap" and "cover" all mean something that closes the top of an open container. Which exact word is used depend on:
1) the kind of container ("bottle/can/jar/jug")
2) the dialect saying this
I recently understood that if the container is big then the top is called" lid" as in jars, and if the the top small then it's called " a cap". Because all are screwed. Am I right?
sdgraham
Senior Member
Oregon, USA
USA English
- Oct 4, 2023
- #18
Meerana said:
Am I right?
Not exactly. Caps do not need to be screwed, although some are these days.
Traditional beer and soft-drink bottlecaps were crimped in place and required an opener to access.
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