Garburator

A garburator is an in-sink waste disposer, mounted under a kitchen sink between the drain and the U-bend. The device first became widely popular in upscale kitchens of the 1970s and 1980s. Concerns over environmental impact weakened its popularity, but kitchen designers and plumbers confirm the renewed appeal of the food-waste-grinding and -liquefying creature that lives under the sink. In-Sink-Erator is the world's largest manufacturer of garburators. There are two varieties of garburator. The most common is the continuous-feed version; once the unit is turned on -- usually by a switch on the wall resembling a light switch -- it continues to run and grind food until switched off. Less common is the batch-feed variety, which will not run until its lid has been put in place and locked; this prevents accidents whereby a child or inattentive adult tries to fish something out of the drain and the unit is accidentally switched on. In the U.S. this appliance is called a garbage disposal unit, often shortened to just "garbage disposal". It is listed in the Canadian Oxford Dictionary as a "Canadian" word.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
massachusetts government act
administration of justice act
amos alonzo stagg
jessica garlick
gould
new found glory (album)
manuel patricio rodriguez garcia
balkh
list of toronto mayors
speaker of the british house of commons
cakewalk (company)
it's been a good life
laurie lee
devil's night
jaron lanier
gewehr 43
gonzalo jimnez de quesada
roger tory peterson
embry riddle aeronautical university
olympiad
evangelical free baptist church
ornithopter
global business network
general conference of the evangelical baptist church, inc.
bess myerson
japanese alps
eber
abraham zapruder
longevity myths
cannula
rafael nez
kimberley
marie louise meilleur
greater sudbury, ontario
maude farris luse
old washington historic state park
margaret knight
elitserien
isotonic
mary dixon kies
vegetative reproduction
state highway
southwest trail
dan snyder