tonger

tonger

(ˈtɒŋə)
n
someone who uses tongs, esp to gather oysters
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Supply of (a) four dump trailer for public cleaning of 4 tons tank & of four exhaustion trailers of 4 M3 size, also (b) one air compressor, seven 3 inch water exhaustion pumps & one tonger for batteries charging in two lots.
Healy, " The first date went well enough for Leo to invite his senorita, 23, over tonger, Ben his new flat in Canary Wharf on Saturday night.
Remove cover and continue coo cing about 15 minutes tonger or until gausa e is browned.
The key proposition here is that traditional institutions -- corporations, advertisers, marketers, "the press" even -- will no tonger be able to control New Media.
I used to get calls from people saying the company wouldn't be around too much tonger. They knew my dad built it from scratch."
As in the last two FAS-FAX reports, these latest reports show that Sunday circulations of the biggest papers can no tonger be counted on to resist the drag of weekday circulations.
The results in Column D show that the breakdown of the model in Column C is not, however, due to the use of the married female employment ratio: even using the original B-W formulation, their model no tonger works in the period after 1954.
Perhaps phrenology merits more than the footnote it receives; a tonger section on Victorian slang, particularly sexual slang, would have been welcome; and more on contemporary entertainment, from the legitimate theatre down to prize-fighting, might have been included.
The grain scheme, for example, which is financed by levies on production and a levy on fertiliser and maize seed, supplemented with payments from the Federal budget, used to form part of the budget, but no tonger does.
Viral excretion has been documented for three weeks and tonger in infants with lower respiratory tract illness.