Spork
hybrid form of cutlery taking the form of a spoon-like shallow scoop with three or four fork
A Spork is a utensil which is a cross between a fork and a spoon.
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edit- I came here to offer a way to make peace with our Republican friends on this heated school lunch issue. Al Gore and I have discovered a reinventing government way, Mr. Armey, to get around this terrible rhetoric we've been flinging at you on school lunches. We have a way to save money through streamlining that does not require us to deprive our children of food. Instead of cutting food, we're going to cut the cutlery. And here's how—with a spork. Now, you know, I don't know how many of you know this, I've been eating off these things for years. I never knew they were called sporks. But that's what they are. This is the symbol of my administration. This is a cross between a spoon and a fork. No more false choice between the left utensil and the right utensil. This is not an ideological choice. This is a choice in the middle and a choice for the future. This is a big, new idea—the spork.
- President Bill Clinton at the March 1995 Radio-TV Correspondents dinner.
- Sporks, for those of you who have been spared, are the dreaded half-spoon, half-fork utensils handed out by some fast-food places that have tines too short to spear anything but are strategically placed to make sure anything liquid winds up on your necktie, blouse, shirt or navel - depending on your choice of attire.
- Jan Glidewell, St. Petersburg Times, July 28, 1996.
- Get away from me fat man, or I'll spork your ass.
- TV show The Critic
- The iPad falls between two stools – not quite a laptop, not quite a smartphone. In other words, it's the spork of the electronic consumer goods world.
- Charlie Brooker, The Guardian, February 01, 2010.