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Spork-like utensils, such as the terrapin fork or ice cream fork, [2] have been manufactured since the late 19th century; [3] patents for spork-like designs date back to at least 1874. Sporks are commonly used by fast food restaurants, schools, prisons, militaries, backpackers, and airlines. [3] The word spork is a portmanteau of spoon and fork.
A ramen spork is a form of spork designed by Masami Takahashi to eliminate waste produced by disposable chopsticks. [8] The design consists of a spoon with four prongs that extend directly from the front rim of the spoon, rather than a cup with incisions made to create tines as usually seen on the traditional spork design.
Spork is the school's food and dining magazine. It was created during the 2011–12 school year through funds generating via Kickstarter. [76] The Spork staff writes and adapts recipes, reviews local restaurants, and publishes food-related features and articles. The magazine is printed and distributed for free in school, in addition to online ...
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Among his inventions was an early typewriter and the spork. [2] Bibliography. Inside Out, a Curious Book by a Singular Man; Life and Death (1870) References
Johann Rudolf von Sporck was born on 27 November 1755 in Prague. [1] His noble parents were Johann Karl, Graf von Spork [2] and Theresia Gräfin von Thürheim. His sisters were Maria Karolina Josefa von Clam-Gallas (1752–1799) and Maria Josefa (b. 1753). [3]
Spork is a 2011 American independent coming-of-age musical comedy-drama film produced by Christopher Racster, Chad Allen, Honey Labrador and Geric Miller-Frost, written and directed by J.B. Ghuman Jr. and starring Savannah Stehlin, Sydney Park, Rachel G. Fox, Michael William Arnold, Oana Gregory, Rodney Eastman, Beth Grant, Yeardley Smith of The Simpsons fame, Keith David, Elaine Hendrix and ...
A spork and a runcible spoon are not the same thing. They have similarities, yes, but the fact that the word 'runcible' was invented by a nonsense poet who didn't really know what it meant throws it into disregard slightly.