I usually have a small towel in the kitchen for hand drying as opposed to dishes drying - it's a real towel, not just a roll of paper kitchen towels which I call Kitchen Roll.
For "kitchen towel" I immediately started typing "absorbent paper" then added the "hand towel" bit when the amibiguity introduced by saying "towel2 instead of "roll" hit me
For me, a "dishcloth" is for washing dishes, a cloth for drying dishes is a "dish towel" and the rolls of towels made out of paper are "paper towels." The same paper towels are used for kitchen purposes, washing glass if you're not using a rag, wiping up cat puke, cleaning the kitchen sink, and so forth -- they don't have separate names depending on the room they're in. I buy them in bulk, and take them out of the same bag when I put them into the kitchen or the bathroom.
Okay, first point of confusion: why would you use a washcloth (which is made of terrycloth squares for the most part) to wash dishes? A sponge or brush works twelve times better. Washcloths are for use in the shower, on the body, not on dishes.
Second point of confusion: The paper things are called paper towels.
I'm not sure whether your poll is asking for what those terms mean to the filler-inner, or what terms the filler-inner uses for those items.
To me:
- dishcloth is not a term I would use (I'd just call it a cloth) but it's an absorbent fabric thing used for wiping up spills, cleaning childrens' faces after food, wiping down kitchen surfaces etc. Maybe 6" square kind of size.
- teatowel is a thin piece of fabric with a hook so it can hang up, probably about 24" by 12" at a guess, so larger (and thinner) than a cloth. It's used for drying up dishes etc that have been washed by hand.
- kitchen towel is a hand towel that happens to live in the kitchen for drying hands etc.
- kitchen roll is absorbent paper squares on a roll used for anything you'd use a cloth for if the cloths are all in the wash, and wiping up assorted bodily fluids for easy disposal :-)
I cut myself off - I'd say "dish towel" rather than "Kitchen towel", I think. And I dry my hands on it, or dry dishes or occasionally mop up big spills with one.
There wasn't enough space for me to note the difference between teatowel and kitchen towel in my world. For me, a teatowel is absorbent like a bath towel, but of a very soft terry cloth roughly half as thick as that used for bath towels. It's good for drying hands, surfaces and dishes in the kitchen.
A kitchen towel is made of a flat or perhaps woven/textured fabric, but isn't nearly as absorbent. It's okay for drying hands but very good for covering proofing doughs (that aren't going to expand beyond the top of the bowl) or baked goods, lining the breadbasket, that sort of thing.
The paper towel / kitchen towel dichotomy may be an "two nations divided by common language" thing. Here (in the US) it's paper towel if it's paper, whether on a roll or folded or anything else. The roll kind may be most commonly found in kitchens, but it's not marketed that way.
The paper stuff on a roll is "paper towel". We don't actually use the phrase "kitchen towel" -- we have a teatowel and a handtowel hanging on the back of the sunroom door, and a roll of paper towels in the thingy on top of the microwave.
let's see : absorbent paper on a roll: paper towel; towel for drying dishes, either light terry cloth or flat woven: dish towel; cloth for washing dishes, counters, spills, etc: dish cloth, or dish rag; tea towels are fancy things, maybe with embroidery on them that are put up for show (not in MY kitchen) and that stay put, untouched, until they become disgustingly dusty; folded absorbent paper to use at table: paper napkins
"kitchen towel" is the paper stuff which my dad calls "kitchen roll" "*a* kitchen towel" is a (hand) towel that lives in the kitchen.
Here's another one: how many of you have a floorcloth? (and how many of you get really pissed off when someone uses your washing-up cloth on the floor? - or even on the surfaces: my sister has separate ones)
Spillchucker doesn't like floorcloth, so this could be interesting.
Very interesting! I seem to be in a tiny minority on all of these questions.
Our kitchen includes: - Kitchen towel: ordinary small towel for drying hands (NOT dishes). Some of the ones we use were (I think) sold with dish-drying in mind, but they're emphatically not used for that purpose. - Dishcloth: what you call a teatowel. I don't say "teatowel" myself, but I'm perfectly familiar with it. I seem to remember my maternal grandmother, or possibly her housekeeper, using "teacloth" to mean the same thing. Ours are mostly fairly nondescript; my parents' tend to be linen, with interesting things printed on them, and they get ironed, which if you ask me is beyond the call of duty. - Kitchen roll: the paper stuff on a roll. - Um ... we have about 20 small towelling cloths, used for wiping spills, sticky hands and faces, crumbs off the table, etc., but I don't really have a name for them. They'd be J-cloths if they were J-cloths, but they aren't, so they're not. If I wanted Niall to hand me one, I might just say "cloth", or "one of his [i.e. Unny's] cloths". He'd know what I meant. - Floor cloth: separate category of cloth used to clean the floor or do other similarly dirty work (e.g. scrubbing out a cupboard). I do occasionally use the um ... cloths to wipe up small spills on the floor, but they get retired to the wash immediately afterwards so that I don't accidentally use them on a counter. (Hands and face get a fresh one, mostly.) - Napkin / paper napkin: cloth / paper square used at table. What a lot of people call a serviette. (I do have odious class connotations for this one, I'm afraid - "serviette" is coded as Common in my reptilian brain.) We don't actually use napkins at the moment, but in the New World Order When Everything Is Fixed™, it's my aim that we will.
kitchen towels
Date: 2007-12-11 04:18 pm (UTC)Re: kitchen towels
From:(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-11 04:21 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-11 04:26 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-11 04:27 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-11 04:35 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-11 04:40 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:Re: Kitchen language
From:(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-11 04:48 pm (UTC)Two points of confusion after reading the responses
Date: 2007-12-11 04:53 pm (UTC)Second point of confusion: The paper things are called paper towels.
Re: Two points of confusion after reading the responses
From:Re: Two points of confusion after reading the responses
From:Re: Two points of confusion after reading the responses
From:Re: Two points of confusion after reading the responses
From:Re: Two points of confusion after reading the responses
From:(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-11 04:53 pm (UTC)To me:
- dishcloth is not a term I would use (I'd just call it a cloth) but it's an absorbent fabric thing used for wiping up spills, cleaning childrens' faces after food, wiping down kitchen surfaces etc. Maybe 6" square kind of size.
- teatowel is a thin piece of fabric with a hook so it can hang up, probably about 24" by 12" at a guess, so larger (and thinner) than a cloth. It's used for drying up dishes etc that have been washed by hand.
- kitchen towel is a hand towel that happens to live in the kitchen for drying hands etc.
- kitchen roll is absorbent paper squares on a roll used for anything you'd use a cloth for if the cloths are all in the wash, and wiping up assorted bodily fluids for easy disposal :-)
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-11 04:55 pm (UTC)Anything paper is a "paper towel" to me.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-11 05:56 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-11 06:05 pm (UTC)A kitchen towel is made of a flat or perhaps woven/textured fabric, but isn't nearly as absorbent. It's okay for drying hands but very good for covering proofing doughs (that aren't going to expand beyond the top of the bowl) or baked goods, lining the breadbasket, that sort of thing.
The paper towel / kitchen towel dichotomy may be an "two nations divided by common language" thing. Here (in the US) it's paper towel if it's paper, whether on a roll or folded or anything else. The roll kind may be most commonly found in kitchens, but it's not marketed that way.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-12 12:35 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-12 04:18 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-12 04:20 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-12 10:03 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-13 11:25 am (UTC)"*a* kitchen towel" is a (hand) towel that lives in the kitchen.
Here's another one: how many of you have a floorcloth? (and how many of you get really pissed off when someone uses your washing-up cloth on the floor? - or even on the surfaces: my sister has separate ones)
Spillchucker doesn't like floorcloth, so this could be interesting.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-18 03:40 am (UTC)teatowel is ornamental
kitchen towel is for drying wet golden paws after dipping in bucket of water due to wild romps in the creek outback.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-22 04:43 pm (UTC)Our kitchen includes:
- Kitchen towel: ordinary small towel for drying hands (NOT dishes). Some of the ones we use were (I think) sold with dish-drying in mind, but they're emphatically not used for that purpose.
- Dishcloth: what you call a teatowel. I don't say "teatowel" myself, but I'm perfectly familiar with it. I seem to remember my maternal grandmother, or possibly her housekeeper, using "teacloth" to mean the same thing. Ours are mostly fairly nondescript; my parents' tend to be linen, with interesting things printed on them, and they get ironed, which if you ask me is beyond the call of duty.
- Kitchen roll: the paper stuff on a roll.
- Um ... we have about 20 small towelling cloths, used for wiping spills, sticky hands and faces, crumbs off the table, etc., but I don't really have a name for them. They'd be J-cloths if they were J-cloths, but they aren't, so they're not. If I wanted Niall to hand me one, I might just say "cloth", or "one of his [i.e. Unny's] cloths". He'd know what I meant.
- Floor cloth: separate category of cloth used to clean the floor or do other similarly dirty work (e.g. scrubbing out a cupboard). I do occasionally use the um ... cloths to wipe up small spills on the floor, but they get retired to the wash immediately afterwards so that I don't accidentally use them on a counter. (Hands and face get a fresh one, mostly.)
- Napkin / paper napkin: cloth / paper square used at table. What a lot of people call a serviette. (I do have odious class connotations for this one, I'm afraid - "serviette" is coded as Common in my reptilian brain.) We don't actually use napkins at the moment, but in the New World Order When Everything Is Fixed™, it's my aim that we will.
(no subject)
From: