Eva’s Byte #436: The Semantics of Ceramics

In the semantics of archaeology, ceramic artifacts are one of the primary means of dating an archaeological site. Ceramic remnants inspire storytelling based on findings and conjecture.

The inspiration for my semantics hails from the treasured ceramics in one of my shelving units, remnants in time celebrating life’s milestones:

On the top shelf, resides a 1970s Vintage hand-painted, Egyptian-patterned, Lenox salad bowl. A retirement memento in recognition for my mother’s years of service at the company she worked for, it symbolizes a chapter in her life within the framework of a quality control inspector.

On one of the lower shelves, resides a floral Lenox vase from the Barrington collection. Gifted to me when I retired from a career in teaching, it symbolizes one of the most rewarding chapters in my life.

In the capacity of a writer, I’ve logically and conceptually finished drafting the semantics of Chapter 39 (877 words) along my Contemporary work in progress. I’ve begun laying out the blueprint for Chapter 40, progressing from 126 words.

*May the storyteller in each of us configure our semantics with artistic expression.

My sincere appreciation to you for reading this far.

Eva’s Authors Den Page: http://www.authorsden.com/evapasco
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