[go: up one dir, main page]

See also: clasp knife

English

edit
 
Clasp-Knife, Spanish, 19th century
About 25 cm long when folded
 
Three-bladed utility clasp-knife. 20th century

Alternative forms

edit

Noun

edit

clasp-knife (plural clasp-knives)

  1. A knife with a hinged blade or blades that, for safety when not in use, can be folded into a slot in the handle.
    • 1859, Journal of the British Archaeological Association[1]:
      ...there is yet ample evidence of the existence of clasp-knives ages before the production of the Canterbury Tales. Among Etruscan antiquities in the Bronze Room of the British Museum are several clasp-knives, some of them with bone, others with bronze hafts, their blades being of iron — a metal employed for cutting implements by the Tyrrhenian tribes, at a far remote era.
      A scalprum or penknife has been found in Rome, the blade shutting into a bone haft, which is carved to represent the upper half of a human body; and clasp-knives, with iconic handles of the Roman era, have been discovered both in France and this country.
    • 1886, R.M. Ballantyne, Red Rooney:
      “Well, this knife is called a clasp-knife, because it shuts and opens, as you see, and it has three blades — a big one for cuttin’ up your victuals with, as you see me doin’; and two little ones for parin’ your nails and pickin’ your teeth, an’ mendin’ pens an’ pencils — though of course you don’t know what that means.”
    • 1945, Tom Ronan, Strangers on the Ophir, Sydney: Angus and Robertson, page 110:
      Blake picked his teeth reflectively with the point of a clasp knife.

Synonyms

edit

Coordinate terms

edit
edit

Translations

edit