Hills Hoist
See also: Hills hoist
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From genitive of Hill (“a surname”) (with elided apostrophe) + hoist (“lift”); from the trade name of the product manufactured from 1945 by Lance Hill of Adelaide, South Australia.
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
Hills Hoist (plural Hills Hoists)
- (Australia) A rotary clothes line with adjustable height by means of a rotating handle.
- 1993, Tim Winton, Land's Edge, page 8:
- Like most Australians I have spent much of my life in the suburbs. I was raised in the Perth suburb of Karrinyup. A quarter acre, a terracotta roof, a facade knocked out by some bored government architect, a Hills Hoist in the back yard and picket fences between us and the neighbours.
- 2002, Meanjin, Volume 61, Melbourne University Press, page 165,
- I watched them glistening over the tiled rooftops and Hills hoists and waited, in awe, for the shadow to reach our Lower Templestowe back yard.
Usage notes
- The Hills Hoist is regarded as symbolic of Australian suburbia.
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