household arts
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English
[edit]Noun
[edit]household arts pl (plural only) (rarely used in the singular)
- (set phrase, dated) Theory and practice involving the skills and specialized knowledge in performing the domestic tasks required to care for the home and its occupants.
- 1855, Thomas Bulfinch, chapter 23, in Bulfinch's Mythology: The Age of Fable:
- For the Phaeacian women as far exceeded all other women in household arts as the mariners of that country did the rest of mankind in the management of ships.
- 1895, R. D. Blackmore, "Buscombe; or, A Michaelmas Goose" in Fringilla: Some Tales In Verse:
- The Vicar's wife was much the same,
- In fairer form presented—
- A lively, yet a quiet dame,
- With home, sweet home, contented.
- In parish, needs; and household arts,
- A lesson to this glib age;
- Well versed in pickles, jams, and tarts,
- Piano, chess, and cribbage.
- The Vicar's wife was much the same,
- 1920, Edith Wharton, chapter 5, in In Morocco:
- The Moroccan lady knows little of cooking, needlework or any household arts.
- 2011 January 19, Cintra Wilson, “A Primer for the Wholesome, Happy Home”, in New York Times, retrieved 3 December 2015:
- The inventory collectively amounts to the ingredients of an ideally wholesome, happy home — tools for a set of forgotten skills, tastes and virtues I casually refer to as “the household arts” — a medium that includes warm sheets stacked on ironing boards, pies cooling on windowsills, Mason jars full of last summer’s gooseberries, and cans of Old Dutch Cleanser under the sink.
Synonyms
[edit]See also
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- “household arts”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.