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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
chopstick
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ An-other guy was so thin and pale that he looked like a chopstick with ink on top.
▪ Angrily, she pushed her thoughts away at the same time as she pushed her bowl and chopsticks away.
▪ He puts down his chopsticks and we leave.
▪ I did eat jelly with chopsticks - as I said!
▪ Otherwise, chopsticks are practical for one-handed eating, if the food is cut up for the patient.
▪ Resigned to bananas, Fong ate thern in silence, with chopsticks.
▪ Then for every drop of oil that stuck to the chopstick a drop of water remained in the bottle.
▪ Whereas few - not to boast - few are speedier on the draw with the old chopsticks than young Ollie.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
chopstick

chopsticks \chop"sticks`\ (ch[o^]p"st[i^]ks`), n. chopstick (ch[o^]p"st[i^]k`), 1. a pair of slender sticks made of wood, ivory, plastic, etc., used chiefly by the Chinese and Japanese to lift food into the mouth while dining; -- also commonly used around the world by persons of Oriental heritage or in restaurants serving oriental food.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
chopstick

also chop-stick, 1690s, sailors' partial translation of Chinese k'wai tse, variously given as "fast ones" or "nimble boys," first element from pidgin English chop, from Cantonese kap "urgent." Chopsticks, the two-fingered piano exercise, is first attested 1893, probably from the resemblance of the fingers to chopsticks.

Wiktionary
chopstick

n. 1 A (single) particular East Asian eating utensil, used in pairs and held in the hand, the utensil is a stick, usually made of wood, of approximately 23cm (~10") in length. 2 (context ethnic slur English) an Asian person

WordNet
chopstick

n. oriental tableware consisting of a pair of sticks used to eat food with [syn: chopsticks]

Usage examples of "chopstick".

Nell knew that there must be mites in there, to make those mediaglyphics, and so she took one of the chopsticks as her magic wand.

She held a chopstick in her left hand, then scratched the word "study" on the miniature beach.

She put the chopstick in the sand, and not knowing what to write, she drew a line and another below that.

Children used chopsticks to play percussion on teacups and water glasses.

She pinched pieces of food with her chopsticks and added these to my bowl.

Ruth is six years old again, the same child, her broken arm healed, her other hand holding a chopstick, ready to divine the words.

Some of them were broad like fans, while others looked like a chopstick with a dot of soft hair at the end.

I even took a chopstick one day and gouged a hole in the bottom of a canvas bag of rice, so she'd have to take everything out of all the cabinets and search for signs of rodents.

If you've ever noticed the way miso settles into a cloud at the bottom of the bowl but mixes quickly with a few whisks of the chopsticks, this is what she meant.

For a moment I watched an old man nearby, who raised up his chopsticks with a little piece of braised tofu and his mouth already as wide as it would go.

Before putting anything in his mouth, he held it up with his chopsticks and peered at it, turning it this way and that.

X, who snatched it with ivory chopsticks, dredged it through an exquisite cloisonné bowl filled with chemical dessicant, and arranged it on a small windowpane of solid diamond.

But Hackworth, who'd eaten his share of Chinese as a student, had never taken well to the plastic chopsticks, which were slick and treacherous in the blunt hands of a gwail o .

Once he'd made that conceptual leap, it wasn't long before he came up with the idea of selling advertising space on the damn things, chopstick handles and Chinese columnar script being a perfect match.

He could only hope that they'd given it the right instructions, as it would be a shame to have a washing machine, a mediatronic chopstick, or a kilo of China 'White materialize in his arm.