Oh, dude, a wombat is not used for cleaning silverware. I mean, unless you want scratched up forks and spoons, then go ahead and give it a try. But, like, I wouldn't recommend it. Wombats are more into digging burrows and munching on grass, not polishing your cutlery.
No. A wombat is a living, breathing marsupial of Australia.
to hit wombaseballs
No, the pilgrims did not have silverware. They typically ate with their hands or used simple utensils made of wood or pewter. Silverware as we know it today was not commonly used until much later in history.
The best silverware is a spoon.
Here is the way the joke works:You and some (probably bored) friends are in a car, or a house, and you ask questions about various people or objects, asking if something about them makes them a wombat. The key is that unless you begin the question with a certain phrase (usually "listen" but it can be "okay" or "look"), the answer is "No, he/it is not a wombat." If the phrase is used, then "Yes, he/it is a wombat."Variations include: "if this is a wombat, and this is a wombat" where the two things (or people) are similar in some way, then is a third thing/person a wombat? Again, it takes awhile before everyone catches on.
Yes, "silverware" is a compound word. It is formed by combining "silver" and "ware" to refer to utensils such as forks, knives, and spoons used for eating.
wombat
A wombat has a pouch.
You can clean silverware at your house using only aluminum foil and baking soda. You do this by boiling water, baking soda, and aluminum foil in a saucepan and than placing your silverware in for about 10 seconds.
The wombat's common name is wombat. The scientific name is Vombatus ursinus.
The wombat's common name is wombat. The scientific name is Vombatus ursinus.
They used spoons, knives, and their hands. But no forks