What did a charwoman do?
Mason Cooper
Published Mar 10, 2026
What did a charwoman do?
A charwoman (also chargirl, charlady or char) is an old-fashioned occupational term, referring to a paid part-time worker who comes into a house or other building to clean it for a few hours of a day or week, as opposed to a maid, who usually lives as part of the household within the structure of domestic service.
What was charring?
Charring is a chemical process of incomplete combustion of certain solids when subjected to high heat. By the action of heat, charring removes hydrogen and oxygen from the solid, so that the remaining char is composed primarily of carbon.
What is a charwoman in England?
noun plural -women. British a woman who is hired to clean, tidy, etc, in a house or office.
Where did the expression char lady come from?
charwoman (n.) “woman hired by the day to do odd work,” 1590s, from Middle English char, cherre “turn of work” (see chore) + woman.
What is a char in British slang?
(tʃɑː ) noun. British a slang word for tea.
What did a Hackler do?
Hackler: worked in the textile industry, used a board with long metal teeth sometimes known as a hackle for dressing flax, jute, hemp etc. Hairman: alternate name for a Hair Weaver, who wove cloth from horse hair.
What is a charring test?
A test that is used to evaluate the temperature of heated aluminium. To test for an ideal temperature, the metal can be touched to a piece of wood which will lead to immediate charring. If the wood ignites, the metal is too hot, if the wood does not char it is too cold.
Is charring the same as burning?
When you burn a piece of food, you’re allowing the proteins and sugars within it to go past the point of caramelization to a fully-blackened, carbonized state. When we talk about charring a piece of food, we are, in fact, asking you to burn it—to take something over the edge between caramelized and carbonized.
What is a trollop in England?
: a vulgar or disreputable woman especially : one who engages in sex promiscuously or for money.
What does the Lou mean in England?
lou in British English or loo (luː ) verb. a Scot word for love.
Where does the insult Doyle come from?
Doylum was a word commonly used in Leeds, Yorkshire, North of England, where I grew up in the 1960s/70s. It basically means idiot – “What a doylum!”