Crossword clues for ginsu
ginsu
- Knife with a faux-Japanese name
- Knife sold on infomercials
- Knife set available for the low, low price of $19.99 (act now!)
- Knife seen cutting tomatoes and pipes in TV ads
- Knife originally called Eversharp
- Knife of TV ads
- Knife of TV ad fame
- Knife of old infomercials
- Knife of infomercials
- Knife in old infomercials
- Knife hyped on TV
- Knife hyped on infomercials
- Knife hawked on TV
- Knife hawked on infomercials
- Knife from Japan
- Kitchen-knife brand
- Kitchen knife type
- Kitchen knife brand
- Kind of knife in old infomercials
- It could cut through a tin can
- Informercial brand once called Quikut
- Hawked knife
- Cutting company
- Cutter of infomercials
- "But wait! There's more!" knife
- "But wait! There's more!" brand
- "... and still cut through a tomato!" knife brand
- Knife pitched on TV
- Infomercial cutter
- Kind of knife advertised on TV
- Infomercial knife brand
- Supersharp knife
- Pitched blade?
- Kind of knife once touted in infomercials
- Big name in knives
- Brand with classic "But wait, there's more ...!" infomercials
- Knife type
- Old infomercial brand
- Knife brand in infomercials
- Infomercial knife name
- Infomercial kitchen brand
- Infomercial cutlery brand
- Infomercial brand
- Cutting-edge brand since the '70s
- "Never needs sharpening" brand
- TV knife that cuts through a lead pipe
- TV knife
- Sharp-knife brand
- Sharp knife brand
- Product whose infomercial coined the phrase "But wait ... there's more!"
- Popular knife brand
- Name in knives
- Many of its knives have a limited lifetime warranty
- Knives sold on TV
Wikipedia
Ginsu
Ginsu is a brand of direct marketed knives that was made popular in the US by being sold on television using infomercials characterized by hawker and hard sell pitch techniques. The ads fueled sales of between two and three million Ginsu sets between 1978 and 1984.