The phrase refers to someone who does almost everything. This includes household duties, taking care of an invalid spouse, running several social networks on the Web, running errands, doing correspondence, doing cooking, cleaning the kitchen, cleaning the bathroom, and...... ....in the remaining two hours left in the day, taking a well-deserved nap
Joseph Banks
Tupaia was a Tahitian chief who served the function of an interpreter.
Benjamin Stoddert became the first Secretary of the US Navy in 1798.
Mary Ann Cook, Jane Maria Cook, John Cook, Thomas Cook, Eliza Cook, Elizabeth Cook, Martha cook
Captain Cook was a ships' captain, not a cook.
My Dad used this term quite often and it seems to be a "phrase" from that Generation....WWII vets. I always thought he was referring to a Chief Cook and Bottle washer...meaning both jobs applied. I originally thought the term was "Chief Cook and bottleneck washer", but when researching, could not find the bottleneck included. I was checking because I wondered if perhaps the bottleneck referred to a beer bottle!
A person skilled in many crafts and studies is call a "jack of all trades". A knowledgeable artist, or scholar, may be referred to as a "Renaissance man".
The Chief Cook was created on 1917-10-01.
the cook and washer up.
The current Chief Executive Officer of the Apple corporation is Tim Cook. Tim Cook became the Chief Executive Officer when Steve Jobs resigned in 2011.
That is the correct spelling of the word chief (noun for leader, adjective for major or primary).
no the correct spelling is chef
cook,and clean
he wanted it all chopped uppp
Tim Cook
A cook or chief is considered vocational education and only requires 6 months to a year of schooling, but you can become a cook or chief without any schooling as long as you can cook. College is not needed.
A CORK stopper is a plug for a bottle made of cork