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A cleaver is a large knife that varies in its shape but usually resembles a rectangular-bladed hatchet. It is largely used as a kitchen or butcher knife and is mostly intended for splitting up large pieces of soft bones and slashing through thick pieces of meat.
Chinese chef's knife (top) and old North American cleaver (bottom) Caidao or so-called 'Chinese cleaver' is not a cleaver, and most manufacturers warn that it should not be used as a cleaver. It is more properly referred to as a Chinese chef's knife and is actually a general-purpose knife, analogous to the French chef's knife or the Japanese ...
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Cleaver (knife)
[1] The LMF II Infantry Knife, features a partial tang blade instead of a full tang blade, ostensibly to avoid electric shocks because the knife was designed to free pilots from downed aircraft. [2] Gerber was the first knife company to collaborate with a custom knife maker when it collaborated with World War II knife maker David Murphy. [3]
Cleaver (Stone Age tool), a type of stone tool; Cleaver (geometry), a line segment that bisects the perimeter of a triangle; Cleaver (propeller), a type of boat propeller design; Cleaver, a type of arête, that separates a unified flow of glacial ice from its uphill side; Cleaver (The Sopranos), a metafictional film within a TV series
Kukri: A Nepalese knife used as a tool and weapon; Maguro bōchō: A traditional Japanese knife with a long specialized blade that is used to fillet large ocean fish. Puukko: A traditional Finnish style woodcraft belt-knife used as a tool rather than a weapon; Seax: A Germanic single-edged knife, dagger or short sword used both as a tool and as ...
This production knife from esteemed knifemaker Josh Smith of Montana Knife Company lives up to its esteemed billing as the “do-it-all” hunting knife. The gradual taper of the 3.5-inch blade's ...
The Buko, also called Buku or Parang Buko is a cleaver that originates from Borneo. This parang is used by the native Bidayuh (Land Dayaks) people. [1] While the Buko is also used by the Malays chiefly for carpentering purposes. [2]