![]() |
Spatula
Heya,
Kind of an odd question -- but how exactly did the spatula get it's name? Regards, Matt |
|
|
> how exactly did the spatula get it's
>name? Looks like a Latin dimuative to me. Probably meant something like "miniature shovel." Neil |
On Sun, 06 Feb 2005 17:54:23 -0600, Damsel in dis Dress
> wrote: >On 6 Feb 2005 15:51:52 -0800, wrote: > >>Kind of an odd question -- but how exactly did the spatula get it's >>name? > >Totally irrelevant, but are you talking about the rubber scrapers, or the >pancake flippers? > My sister's MIL used mistakenly to refer to this kitchen item as a "spatch-OLA." We refer to it that way most of time, too, at family gatherings. It doesn't take much to crack us up when we all get together to cook. Still, your question makes perfect sense to me. One The Hub and I are cooking together and one asks the other to hand a spatula from the drawer, the other is likely to say, "You mean the pancake flipper or the other thingee?" Boron |
On Sun, 06 Feb 2005 19:41:40 -0500, Boron Elgar >
wrote: >On Sun, 06 Feb 2005 17:54:23 -0600, Damsel in dis Dress > wrote: > >>Totally irrelevant, but are you talking about the rubber scrapers, or the >>pancake flippers? > >Still, your question makes perfect sense to me. One The Hub and I are >cooking together and one asks the other to hand a spatula from the >drawer, the other is likely to say, "You mean the pancake flipper or >the other thingee?" We go through the exact same thing here. The only thing they have in common is that they both have handles. Carol -- "Years ago my mother used to say to me... She'd say, 'In this world Elwood, you must be oh-so smart or oh-so pleasant.' Well, for years I was smart.... I recommend pleasant. You may quote me." *James Stewart* in the 1950 movie, _Harvey_ |
WardNA wrote: > > how exactly did the spatula get it's > >name? > > Looks like a Latin dimuative to me. Probably meant something like "miniature > shovel." Close. "Oxford" -ORIGIN late 18th cent.: via Latin from Greek spathe 'broad blade'. --- |
On 6-Feb-2005, Priscilla Ballou > wrote: > In article . com>, > wrote: > > > Heya, > > > > Kind of an odd question -- but how exactly did the spatula get it's > > name? > > From dictionary.com: > > Latin, flat piece of wood, splint, diminutive of spatha, broadsword. > > Priscilla And from Merriam-Webster, "Etymology: Late Latin, spoon, spatula" http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?spatula x-- 100 Proof News - http://www.100ProofNews.com x-- 3,500+ Binary NewsGroups, and over 90,000 other groups x-- Access to over 1 Terabyte per Day - $8.95/Month x-- UNLIMITED DOWNLOAD |
In article >,
Boron Elgar > wrote: > My sister's MIL used mistakenly to refer to this kitchen item as a > "spatch-OLA." We refer to it that way most of time, too, at family > gatherings. It doesn't take much to crack us up when we all get > together to cook. > > Still, your question makes perfect sense to me. One The Hub and I are > cooking together and one asks the other to hand a spatula from the > drawer, the other is likely to say, "You mean the pancake flipper or > the other thingee?" In my family when I was growing up, neither a "pancake turner" (aka "hamburger turner") nor a "rubber licker" was a "spatula." Those wide flat knives without a cutting edge were called spatulas. Priscilla -- "It is very, very dangerous to treat any human, lowest of the low even, with contempt and arrogant whatever. The Lord takes this kind of treatment very, very personal." - QBaal in newsgroup alt.religion.christian.episcopal |
On Mon, 07 Feb 2005 03:01:48 GMT, Priscilla Ballou >
wrote: >In my family when I was growing up, neither a "pancake turner" (aka >"hamburger turner") nor a "rubber licker" was a "spatula." Those wide >flat knives without a cutting edge were called spatulas. Damn! Come to think of it, I call all three of those spatulas. Pretty soon, everything will be called spatulas, and no one will know what anyone else is talking about, It'll be culinary anarchy. ARGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH! Carol -- "Years ago my mother used to say to me... She'd say, 'In this world Elwood, you must be oh-so smart or oh-so pleasant.' Well, for years I was smart.... I recommend pleasant. You may quote me." *James Stewart* in the 1950 movie, _Harvey_ |
Sheldon wrote: > WardNA wrote: > > > how exactly did the spatula get it's > > >name? > > > > Looks like a Latin dimuative to me. Probably meant something like > "miniature > > shovel." > > Close. > > "Oxford" > > -ORIGIN late 18th cent.: via Latin from Greek spathe 'broad blade'. > --- Hmm, how did I miss that... wouldn't a "broad blade" be a speculum? hehe |
|
>Heya,
> >Kind of an odd question -- but how exactly did the spatula get it's >name? > >Regards, >Matt > I don't know, but I knew a pharmacist who told me about when he first opened his lab kit with his pharmacy partner in pharmacy school. They called that thing a sp-TU-la. |
In article >,
Damsel in dis Dress > wrote: > On Mon, 07 Feb 2005 03:01:48 GMT, Priscilla Ballou > > wrote: > > >In my family when I was growing up, neither a "pancake turner" (aka > >"hamburger turner") nor a "rubber licker" was a "spatula." Those wide > >flat knives without a cutting edge were called spatulas. > > Damn! Come to think of it, I call all three of those spatulas. Pretty > soon, everything will be called spatulas, and no one will know what anyone > else is talking about, It'll be culinary anarchy. > > ARGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH! I sense the makings of a Monty Pythonesque skit here... Priscilla -- "It is very, very dangerous to treat any human, lowest of the low even, with contempt and arrogant whatever. The Lord takes this kind of treatment very, very personal." - QBaal in newsgroup alt.religion.christian.episcopal |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:53 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FoodBanter