pancake-maker

English

Etymology

From pancake in its various meanings and maker - one who makes.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpæn.keɪk/, /ˈpæŋ.keɪk/
  • (file)

Noun

pancake-maker (plural pancake-makers)

  1. One who makes pancakes, thin fried batter cakes.
    • 1836, Dick Humelbergius Secundus, Apician Anecdotes: Or Tales of the Table, Kitchen, and Larder, J. D. Strong, page 144:
      &hellip the great Condé took great credit to himself for being an excellent pancake-maker
    • 1937, Norman W. Caldwell, Fangs of the Sea, page 53:
      Whereupon the pancake-maker showed how he could turn them. He tossed a pancake high in the air and deftly caught it in the pan.
  2. A machine which does the same as (1). Also known as a pancake machine or a crepe maker.
  3. One who makes pancake, a composite leather of scraps, glue and board, material originally used for insoles, but later used also for heels and even soles.
    • 1903, Davis Rich Dewey, Twelfth Census of the United States: Special report: Employees and Wages, page 1200:
      &hellip in the poorer grades the heel is made of scrap leather and leather board or pulp, finished with a solid leather top lift. The composite material, called pancake, is made by an operative, usually a girl, called a pancake-maker; it is used sometimes for soles as well as heels.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.