clockware
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]clockware (uncountable)
- Clocks collectively.
- 1909 December 10, “Cargoes Worth Millions; Brisk Morning Business in Shipping; Three Ocean Liners Arrive and Two Depart; […]”, in Boston Evening Transcript, eightieth year, number 288, page 1:
- Both incoming liners had large quantities of Christmas goods, such as laces and linens, clockware, nuts and grapes.
- 1916 August 9, “When the Alarm Clock Goes Ting-a-ling in the Morning”, in The Evening Times, volume I, number 45, Tulsa, Okla., Sand Springs, Okla., page five, column 5:
- Anyway, the little alarm clock has everything over all other forms and fashions and designs in clockware right at this time.
- 1996, Jim Fisher, Fall Guys: False Confessions and the Politics of Murder, Carbondale, Ill., Edwardsville, Ill.: Southern Illinois University Press, →ISBN, page 119:
- We sell other merchandise too—clockware, candles, clip-on lights, and things like that.