utensilware

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English

Etymology

From utensil +‎ -ware.

Noun

utensilware (uncountable)

  1. Utensils collectively.
    • 1930 April 18, “Max P. T. A. Field Day”, in The Benkelman Post and News-Chronicle, volume 36, number 50, Benkelman, Neb., page 10, column 1:
      The afternoon brought the spud contests, racing, freak events—always a big event in the lives of little men, and when later the ladies stepped into th limelight and demonstrated how they could heave the stove utensilware and “slamb” the nails into tough timber, is was not for anyone but a hawk to see how they did it.
    • 1941 January 5, Chicago Sunday Tribune, part 3— D:
      Aluminumware / A famous name in utensil-ware—now at a drastic redution.
    • 1944 February, W. Rupert Maclaurin, “Wages and Profits in the Paper Industry, 1929–1939”, in The Quarterly Journal of Economics, volume LVIII, number 2, →DOI, page 215:
      The highest modal concentrations in a 10-cent range were 78.5 per cent in seamless hosiery, 70.6 per cent in enameled utensilware and 66.7 per cent in radio manufacturing.
    • 1954 July 21, “Metal Kitchenware ‘On the Square’”, in The State Journal, Lansing, Mich., page 51:
      A new line of kitchen utensilware featuring both copper and stainless steel will be brought out on the eastern market in mid-September.
    • 1955 March 8, “Stainless Steel Ideal”, in Winston-Salem Journal, 58th year, number 291, Winston-Salem, N.C., page , column 4:
      Stainless steel is now recognized by countless homemakers as ideal for service, both in utensilware and flatware.
    • 1958 March 2, “Kappa Deltas Hold Meeting”, in Ogden Standard-Examiner, 87th year, number 47, Ogden, Ut., page 2C, column 8:
      A combination meeting and utensilware party will be held by members of the Ogden Kappa Delta Alumnae Assn. at the home of Mrs. Robert V. Glasmann, 1270 33rd, on Wednesday, at 8 p.m.
    • 1962 May 17, William C. Kassebaum, “Teen-Ager Learns About Financing”, in The Indianapolis News, page 58:
      Then in comes a salesman yesterday offering Austrian aluminum cooking utensilware in unlimited quantity.
    • 1991 August, Marvin E. Winston, “Food Service Sanitation Guidelines to Avoid Food Poisoning Outbreaks”, in Dairy, Food and Environmental Sanitation, page 430, column 2:
      Likewise, single service dish or utensilware if used once, cannot be re-used. They must be discarded.
    • 2000 October 26, “Chief Steward”, in Intelligencer Journal, 207th year, number 113, Lancaster, Pa., classified section, page 13, column 3:
      Duties include maintaining proper utensilware levels throughout the kitchen;
    • 2004, Shiela Reaves, Wisconsin: Land of Change: An Illustrated History, Sun Valley, Calif.: American Historical Press, →ISBN, page 154:
      Wisconsin entrepreneurs bought aluminum from Alcoa and made cookware, which by 1919 was close to becoming the most preferred cookware and utensilware.

Synonyms