The English word for chopsticks is chopsticks.
"Chopsticks" is 箸 (hashi) in Japanese.
The Chinese word for chopsticks meant "fast bamboo". In pidgin English the word for fast was chop chop. So fast became chopand bamboo became stick.
CHOPSTICKS.
The word "chopsticks" originated from China. Chopsticks have been used in Chinese culture for thousands of years and eventually spread to other parts of Asia.
Chopsticks!
i went to the cinema with my friends - tomodachi TO eigakan ni ikimashita. (lit, friends with cinema to went) i eat sushi with chopsticks - sushi ha hashi DE tabemasu. (lit, sushi chopsticks with eat) 一緒に isshoni - together, with
Chopsticks
They both mean chopsticks. Hashi simply means 'chopsticks' and waribashi means wooden/bamboo chopsticks. So, one word is a scpecific kind, and the other simply means all types, just the thing in general. If you look up 'chopsticks' in Wikipedia, it has a good explanation.
Technically, "chopstick" refers to one individual utensil, while "chopsticks" refers to the pair of utensils used together. So, you can use the singular "chopstick" when referring to just one, but typically "chopsticks" is used to describe the pair.
There is no specific collective noun for chopsticks, in which case a general collective noun is used. Examples are a set of chopsticks, a box of chopsticks, a supply of chopsticks, etc.
chopsticks
Silverware is 10 letters, but not the ones you need. How about chopsticks?