Or "Daddies Sauce"!"HP Sauce" being used to describe any old brown sauce.
Or "Daddies Sauce"!"HP Sauce" being used to describe any old brown sauce.
As referred to by Alan Partridge in the classic sketch:Public address systems are sometimes referred to as Tannoys, but in actuality Tannoy is a manufacturer of PA systems as well as loudspeakers.
Formerly owned by the Dickinson Robinson Group or DRG by the looks of it, a name I remember seeing a lot during my childhood and teens but not much since (as it appears to no longer exist).Sellotape for any kind of clear, polypropylene-based tape with a pressure sensitive adhesive. Not just specific varieties now manufactured by Henkel AG & Co.
A Henry isn't a Henry without a face.A "Henry" to describe a small, rotund "Hoover" on wheels.
A "Flymo" to describe any brand of hovering lawnmower.
Where I worked had a marketplace on the intranet, on more than one occasion I saw people advertising Dyson Hoovers for sale.A Henry isn't a Henry without a face.
Does anyone ever describe a bagless vacuum cleaner as a Dyson? I don't but I'm sure others do.
I believe it's called Lexan in the US, again a genericised trademark.I'm sure Perspex was an ICI product.
Not quite, Perspex is PMMA or acrylic and lexan is PC or polycarbonate.I believe it's called Lexan in the US, again a genericised trademark.
I must take issue with these two examples. The first because use of such devices has pretty much ended with the invention and widespread use of smartphones. The iPod does sort of live on in the form of the term "podcast" but that's getting into the weeds somewhat!iPod (MP3 player)
PlayStation (games console)
My mum owns a Numatic vacuum cleaner, butA Henry isn't a Henry without a face.
Does anyone ever describe a bagless vacuum cleaner as a Dyson? I don't but I'm sure others do.
That's actually acceptable as due to the selling of Hoover's European operations to Candy (both now owned by Haier, I believe) and the American operation now owned by TTi, who acquired Vax some time ago, that's exactly what you've got, a Hoover ad would be sold as such in the US and some other markets.I do own a bagless vacuum cleaner manufactured by Vax, I've never called it a Dyson but I have used "hoover" both as a noun and a verb. There's a reason that "Hoover" is the go-to example for genericised trademarks. I'm sure the Domestos and Fairy Liquid examples do happen occasionally, but they won't be anything like as widespread as Hoover.
That's an unusual one, in that the "Biro" brand disappeared decades ago. I remember having one or two ballpoint pens with that brand name in the 1960s but I haven't seen it since then. Of course the name originated with the inventor László Bíró, not just the eponymous company.Biro.
Gurney was another term we used during my apprenticeship. We brought the dies from the press shop in to the tool room on flat four wheeled carts we called Gurneys. In actual fact none were trade marked as Gurney but all had different manufacturers under a variety of names. But every flat trolley was called a Gurney.
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Bridgeport was another term we always used for a turret type vertical milling machine during my apprenticeship days.
These technical generic terms always seemed to have an American origin when related to manufacturing.
I thought that was those blokes (and lasses) who could stretch their bottom lips up to cover the tip of their nose!In American writing, I've often come across "gurney" (small g) meaning a wheeled stretcher for transporting hospital patients -- something for which there doesn't seem to be a single British English word !
Is that brand name used all that often, generically?Dexion metal shelving systems.
or a Kenwood/Kenwood ChefI've heard Kitchen Aid used to describe any kitchen stand mixer.
But that’s because they’re using Google. That’s not a generic term. Browsing the forum here isn’t “googling”.
I was under the impression that 'petrol' was just a shortening of the naming petroleum, as this company were refinerers of petroleum spirit, just like 'gas' was/is short for gasoline?"Petrol" was first used to describe the product of the Carless, Capel & Leonard company. At the time all other producers used the term "Motor Sprit".
I've heard Kitchen Aid used to describe any kitchen stand mixer.
I've always thought of them as Mixmasters, after Sunbeam's trademark.or a Kenwood/Kenwood Chef