What do you call it?

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Boris Tatarenko

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What do you call it? ;-) I'd say it's a brush, but I'm not sure.
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MikeNewYork

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It looks like a toilet brush to me.
 

Boris Tatarenko

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Yeah, it's for a toilet. Can I say simply a "brush"?
 

Matthew Wai

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A brush may be a toothbrush, hairbrush, shoe brush, shaving brush, etc.

Not a teacher.
 

MikeNewYork

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You can, but it will not be understood. There are other brushes.
 

Rover_KE

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I'm going to stick my neck out and say that to the overwhelming majority of native English speakers, this is a brush:

images


Specifically, it's a sweeping brush, but with one exception, every other brush is named according to its purpose: toothbrush, shaving brush, lavatory brush, scrubbing brush, bottlebrush, paintbrush, hairbrush, nailbrush etc.

The exception is a hand brush — also used for sweeping on a smaller scale and often paired with a dustpan:

images
 

emsr2d2

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In BrE, what Rover has posted is a broom. It's specifically an outside broom. One with softer bristles is an (indoor) broom. The second picture is "a dustpan and brush". The picture in the original post is definitely a "toilet brush".
 

Rover_KE

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In my dialect of BE, this is a broom:

images
 

emsr2d2

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Sorry, I am utterly convinced you're an AusE speaker! Oops. For me, that's a besom.
 

Rover_KE

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(Not an Australian)

In NW England, a besom is a homemade broom made out of twigs:

images


Witches ride on broomsicks — not besom sticks.

images
 

emsr2d2

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I agree entirely that witches ride on broomsticks but if I saw a photo of a witch riding on a (modern) item for sweeping the floor, she would still be riding a broomstick, not a brushstick.

It might well be another regional thing but I have never called THIS a brush.
 

Barb_D

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Hmm. The default "brush" is a hairbrush for me.

That was a broom, for sure.
 

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MikeNewYork

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There are many brushes here (along with some combs).
 

emsr2d2

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I agree that neither a toilet brush nor a dustpan brush would come under the term "broom". For me, a broom is long-handled, made of either plastic or wood and has a generally rectangular collection of soft or hard bristles on the end and is used for sweeping the floor or a paved outside area.

A toilet brush and a dustpan brush would come under "brushes".

I've never spent so long discussing household cleaning implements! :shock:
 

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SoothingDave

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In BrE, what Rover has posted is a broom. It's specifically an outside broom. One with softer bristles is an (indoor) broom. The second picture is "a dustpan and brush". The picture in the original post is definitely a "toilet brush".

Both Rover's picture and the witch's broom are brooms.
 

MikeNewYork

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In BrE, what Rover has posted is a broom. It's specifically an outside broom. One with softer bristles is an (indoor) broom. The second picture is "a dustpan and brush". The picture in the original post is definitely a "toilet brush".

I would call the first of Rover's pictures a "push broom".
 

emsr2d2

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I would call the first of Rover's pictures a "push broom".

Definitely not used in BrE. Presumably that is because the only things we call brooms are all "pushed", although of course they are equally effective when pulled.
 

Rover_KE

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What I call a brush is pushed:

images



What I call a broom is swept from side to side:

images
 
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