What do you call it ?

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Skilsaw-term for a handheld circular saw-is a tradename!
Kleenex-tissues for your nose another tradename!
weedeater-term for a nylon string grass trimmer-and actual tradename.
crescent wrench-used to describe any adjustable wrench-tradename.
Bushhog-Tradename for a tractor drawn rotary brushcutter-also used as a generic name.Best to use "brushhog"
 
My elderly aunt calls all heaters “the fire”.

They would have been referring to “an electric fire” but she’ll even call a water filled radiator “the fire.”

She’ll also call all cooking surfaces “the gas” - so an induction hob is still “the gas”.

That and she has “the pipe” meaning piped television, meaning cable.
 
A “soft drink” or is a soda here. You’ll also see then described as “minerals” on menus, a throwback to mineral water (sparkling water).

The “Mouli” is also a term you’ll find used by certain older people here in reference to *all* mixers. It’s a throwback to the Moulinex brand.

There are a few other odd ones too.

The press = the cupboard.

The hot press = the airing cupboard
(a closet that contained the water heater storage tank and was usually full of slatted shelves for keeping hot towels and a favourite place for cats to hide)

A load of bread in Ireland is “a pan” (same as french).

So a Sliced Pan is a normal sliced loaf.
 
Stove in Australia.

It is changing in recent years to be called an "oven." This makes my blood boil.

 

Choice magazine - I wrote to them when they started calling them "freestanding ovens" and said that "oven" refers to the hot air cavity inside the STOVE. They replied that the industry is now calling them "ovens" and they are just reflecting that use of the word "oven."

I looked online and sure enough, the Good Guys website: Products>Cooking and Dishwashers>Ovens>Freestanding Ovens.

Appliances online: Ovens and Cooking > Freestanding Ovens.

E and S trading: Kitchen and cooking>Ovens>Freestanding ovens.

 

Philistines! No wonder I grind my teeth at night.

 



https://www.appliancesonline.com.au/category/cooking/stoves   (Though the URL calls them "stoves" the page shows "freestanding ovens.")

 
Hob is only a “cooktop”. It always means just the cooking surface, whether part of a free standing cooker (stove) or built into a counter top, it’s a hob.

It goes back to at least as early as the 1600s and referred to a flat shelf above or beside a fireplace that was used to either keep food warm or cook it.

Old pre electric irons were also heated on a special hob.

It became the term used for the surface of a range and then continued to be used for modern cooking appliances using gas and electricity.

The term “burner” is never used in association with electric cookers. You would confuse people by using the term as it doesn’t make sense here. It’s always “ring” and that’s carried through to ceramic hobs and induction to describe zones. If you were ordering a spare part it would be a “cooker element” or “ring”

It’s also the normal phrase used in reference to gas rather than burners, you’ll hear “ring”.

The term burner is very technical here. Like you might actually order a burner as a spare part, but you’d never really refer to cooking on one. They’re often called a ring burner technically too because of their shape.

The term furnace here isn’t used either. It applies only to big industrial devices for melting metal or incinerating waste.

The device that heats a central heating system is a “boiler” (even though it doesn’t boil). So you’ll have a gas boiler, an oil fired boiler, a back boiler (in a fireplace) etc etc

A water heater can be called a water heater, the water heating, an immersion and often instantaneous water heaters are called combi boilers as they are usual a dual purpose unit that burns has to heat either radiators or hot water for taps.

The term faucet isn’t used at all. It’s always tap. Faucet doesn’t really mean anything here - I’m not aware of the term ever being used. It seems to have ended up in US English from old French. The modern french term is robinet. Faucet isn’t used.
 
The other one you may not encounter in the US is “liquidiser” rather than “blender”. The term blender is becoming used more but both terms are used interchangeably.

There are probably plenty more too!
 
Reply #23

That is exactly the sort of incompetence I expect from modern day companies - frankly, it does not surprise me in the slightest.

Speaking of cookers... I was looking at Belling's range of cookers. Pretty dire styling now.
 
Guilty of calling it "stove" at times, but specifying if gas or electric, I use "range" most of the times.

It says in UK they call them hobs when induction? Bah. I have always seen British people referring to them as "cookers" no matter how it gets hot, it is confusing too as it sounds more like an electric pot or slow cooker.

In Italian they are either called translating litterally "stoves" or "kitchens", a cook top is a "cooking top" or "fornello-i" that translates into "burner-s".

A oven is a oven, just the heated chamber. No stoves or ranges are referred to as "ovens".

 
 
Ireland and the UK:

Hob = cooktop / cooking surface. Doesn’t matter if it’s just a hob on its own or a component of a cooker (stove) or what type of heat source it uses. If you can heat a pot or a pan on it, it’s a hob.

Cooker = stand-alone appliance combining ovens and hob of any type.

Cooker is also often used inaccurately and generically to refer to any large cooking appliance too. You might get someone referring to a built-in hob or an oven as “a cooker.”

Sometimes a range might even get called a cooker.

For a bit of entertainment, here’s a selection of 1980s “cookers”, with their own electropop theme from ESB (now Electric Ireland) for their Cook Electric campaign:
 
I don't think there's anything wrong with calling a burner an Eye, at least on an electric range or STOVE, it would make sense, as for a freezer---a stand-alone or free-standing, it is always going to be called a deep freeze, regardless of brand (it was originally termed that by Amana and as a chest freezer) and even if it as in commonly referred to as a chest freezer, is even given to an upright...

-- Dave
 
"Light the Oven"

Growing up here in New England, we always called it a stove. "Range" was considered the more "modern" American term. We had a Roper 36" stove with the center rotisserie/grill. Inside were two pilot (gas) lights that always kept the center of the stove warm--great for warming food for lunch on the weekends or whenever you wanted to warm something up. It was also great for drying Mixer beaters so they wouldn't rust or anything that you wanted to be thoroughly dried. We also had to literally "Light" the oven by lighting a match and inserting into the hole while turning the gas on. It would be beat any stove made today, hands down!

By the way, we also called the fridge, the icebox and I still call it that today mostly when around family.
 
Light the oven

Many homes around here had gas stoves as a kid, many also with kerosene heaters on the opposite side. The CP stoves had pilots for every burner, including oven. My mother and everyone else in my neighborhood would stick a lit match in a hole. Anything to be lit manually, legally can not be hooked to gas service in this state now.
 
<span style="font-size: 14pt; color: #339966;">Stove...but I like Judy Holliday's recalling of a TV commercial she once did as her "acting experience" in the classic film "The Solid Gold Cadillac" using a sultry voice..."try this new International Projects gas range with the ever-lovin oven"</span>

twintubdexter-2021063015104201066_1.jpg
 

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