chopping-board

See also: chopping board

English

Noun

chopping-board (plural chopping-boards)

  1. Alternative form of chopping board.
    • 1825 October 4, The Morning Post, number 17,095, London, →OCLC, page [3], column 5:
      [T]he woman held it under the tap, and then wiped it with the same cloth she cleaned out the copper with, the verdigris from which adhered to the chopping-board, and from that to the suet with which the pudding was made.
    • 2013 July 1, Mike Ives, “Humerus reunion: Doctor returns Vietnamese vet’s arm”, in Park City Daily News, year 158, number 182, Bowling Green, Ky., →OCLC, page 7A, columns 4–5:
      “When I was captured by the American forces, I was like a fish on a chopping-board,” [Nguyen Quang] Hung said last week. “They could have either killed or spared me.”
    • 2013 October 25, Keith Newbery, “This Island Life: If it works for you – and tastes good – why not?”, in Isle of Wight County Press, Newport, Isle of Wight, →ISSN, →OCLC, Weekender section, page 2, columns 1–2:
      Indeed, I became so addicted to this delightful nectar that I mastered the art of racking my childlike body with bogus spasms of croup in the hope of persuading her to set to with the onion and the chopping-board.