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Borrowed from Middle Dutchglas or Middle Low Germanglas(“glass (material; container)”). The Germanic term probably meant originally “amber” (a meaning still attested in Old High German), and only later “glass.” The borrowing is first mentioned in 17th-century Latvian dictionaries (though the family name Glāznieks is already attested in Kurzeme in the 16th century). Up until the 19th century, glāze meant both the material and the container; by the late 19th century on, these two meanings had already been split between glāze and stikls.[1]
“jūs esat lielisks runātājs, biedri Saleniek”, teica Ozols, pasniegdams ūdens glāzi ― “you are a great speaker, comrade Saleniek,” Ozols said, handing him a glass of water
apsēdies, izdzer glāzi piena ― sit down, drink a glass of milk
saputotām olām pievienot glāzi piena ― to add a glass of milk to the whipped eggs
divām glāzēm ogu pievienot divas glāzes cukura ― to add two glasses of sugar to two glasses of berries