chopstick









chopstick


chopstick [chop-stik] ExamplesWord Origin noun

  1. one of a pair of thin, tapered sticks, often of wood or ivory, held in one hand between the thumb and fingers and used chiefly in China, Japan, and other Asian countries for lifting food to the mouth.

Origin of chopstick 1690–1700; Chinese Pidgin English chop quick (see chop-chop) + stick1 Examples from the Web for chopstick Contemporary Examples of chopstick

  • Poke center of Italian sausages with chopstick to make well, fill with chocolate syrup and twist the open end of the sausage.

    Epic Meal Empire’s Meat Monstrosities: From the Bacon Spider to the Cinnabattleship

    Harley Morenstein

    July 26, 2014

  • Historical Examples of chopstick

  • Anybody who can make a shoe-peg or wooden toothpick can make a chopstick.

    Punchinello Vol. II., No. 30, October 22, 1870

    Various

  • One may search in vain for the trace of any object in the nature of a chopstick in Central or South America.

    Appletons’ Popular Science Monthly,

    Various

  • It is to be hoped that the chopstick may ultimately be adopted here instead of the knife and fork.

    Punchinello Vol. II., No. 30, October 22, 1870

    Various

  • Word Origin and History for chopstick n.

    also chop-stick, 1690s, sailors’ partial translation of Chinese k’wai tse, variously given as “fast ones” or “nimble boys,” first element from pidgin English chop, from Cantonese kap “urgent.” Chopsticks, the two-fingered piano exercise, is first attested 1893, probably from the resemblance of the fingers to chopsticks.

    54 queries 0.550