Here in N. Ireland I'm familiar with the term swill, to rinse or to take a drink. Occasionally now but more in my childhood.
Gransnet forums
House and home
Dishwashers
(32 Posts) Sorta late in then day to start a discussion but I was recently house hunting and the first thing that's important to me is a dishwasher. As a young mother i had to do without for the first year of my sons life and the two years before he was born.I can't imagine having to do without.Im always using too many dishes and cutlery. Im very careful and always grab a clean object. Do several of you manage without? I once asked ole Pete if his family had a dishwasher and he said yes..his wife! 
Gosh; I'd forgotten the word as well. My mum used it a lot for washing things. Tend to think of it [from memory] as not a thorough clean but more of a quick rinse, so maybe it originated from an implication that something hadn't been washed thoroughly, therefore not quite clean [just a theory].
I live in Leics and have heard swill used lots but, before that, I heard it used by my Lancashire Nan, in Derbyshire!
I think mine is a Mrs Bucket aversion to the word as we lived opposite a small holding when I was young and I was always being sent over with revolting, smelly stuff to put in their 'swill' for the pigs!
I am far from posh POGS just didn't like the thought of pig swill and it came to mind every time.
Nellie
I now live in Leics .
Swill is a common word I would have thought and it means to cleanse, wash or rinse using liquid.
Pig swill is also correct.
And of course to swill down a drink, gulp etc.
So I don't see it as a mucky or dirty word butbut then again I'm not very posh, 
I thought it was a horrid word with connotations of pig swill!! I never used it myself. Like you I thought it sounded dirty.
Annsixty I picked "swill" up from my origins in Leicestershire. It was largely my Mum's family word. I don't like the word "swill" at all and stopped using it. To me it sounds like its mucky or dirty.
https://www.google.co.uk/?gws_rd=ssl#q=swill
Reading these definitions I can now see why I dislike it.
When DD1 was born 33 years ago DH did the washing up in the evening whilst DD1 screamed. After 3 weeks he asked me to stay home one Friday afternoon as he had ordered some bricks to be delivered. No bricks but a dishwasher arrived. It was a Servis model which lasted about 13 years with assistance from some superglue to hold a vital washer together. Then I had a Phillips Aquajet - the cheapest one on offer when the Servis died. The Phillips lasted 12 years and then we lived in a mobile home for 3 years NO dishwasher. We built a new house and designed the kitchen, DH came out with a strange idea - TWO dishwashers. I have two Smeg slimline dishwashers which are brilliant.
I had to think this through when DH suggested 2 dishwashers - basically you never unload the clean china from the dishwasher and the dirty china goes into the second dishwasher until it is full - then you run the dishwasher and put the dirty china into the first one, etc.
Nellie
Originally Somerset.
I come from Derbyshire and my mother used to " swill " everything, including herself. I had forgotten all about it but after lunch or dinner as it was called she would go up to the bathroom for a swill before changing for the afternoon.
Pogs Swill instead of rinse I have not heard that word in yonks. Where abouts do you or did you used to live?
I bought one when I still had two late teens at home. Fed up with finding dishes piled in the sink when I came home from a hard day at the chalk face, I had a Hotpoint installed and never regretted it for a minute, though getting the DSs to unload the machine was an uphill struggle. When I downsized, my kitchen didn't have room for my beloved Hotpoint, but after a few years I had a new kitchen and priority was a dishwasher - a narrow one to fit the space available. A godsend when I had an arm in a sling for six weeks following shoulder surgery. And now 'the boys' have their own kitchens and dishwashers.
My dishwasher broke down once and the repair man said "How long have you had this one". I said "Oh yonks". He said "I know it's an old model but it's so clean and cared for inside". Hubby chipped up "That's because she washes everything before she puts it in". 
It's true I 'swill' everything clean before I put it in. I never wash pots and pans in it, still scrub them by hand. Honest I don't have OCD 
Hubby says it's a God send for him because he soon learnt he never loads it correctly so he has a total let off clause even going near it. Talk about making a rod for your own back. 
At my first interview for a Home Economics teaching job I was asked if I would have a dishwasher when I got married (asked of course by a male interviewer). My reply was 'No' as I would have a husband. When said husband went on to pastures new after 22 years I got a dishwasher and I know which I prefer !
I've got a Bosch integrated one which we bought in a panic the Christmas before last. Not I know that the filter SCREWS down, it's brilliant. We had 3 engineers out to see what was wrong with it and not one of them spotted that the filter was sort of floating free. Then I sorted it!! (going to be a dishwasher engineer if I grow up!!)
We've had one since 1975 and I would rather be without a clothes washer than a dishwasher, at least until they start doing services washes for pots and pans!
DD1 doesn't put her pans in the dishwasher either. I though that was the main purpose of them. 
I was expecting no 3 and was a sick as could be , the Doctor was called , I was leaning over the sink full of saucepans , the draining board was full of crockery .She took me by the elbow and led me to a chair , told me to go to bed, looked at OH and told him to get a dishwasher . So glad I had a Lady Doctor . we have a Bosch at the moment and it is great , never seem to have room for the saucepans with having the grandsons for breakfast and tea so often
The cooker hood filters also go in the dishwasher.
I'm finding that the cutelry basket is breaking up. Someone told me there are websites for cheap replacements. Must look. x
Charley Now thats what I call clean
My fridge gets a spray and a wipe with a damp cloth.
I never had a dishwasher throughout my married life although the kitchen was huge. Once I was on my own, that was one of many treats and I would not be without one now. I also wash my saucepans by hand, I feel that a dishwasher ruins them.
I use it for all sorts of jobs eg washing the glass shelves in my fridge and fridge /freezer- they come out sparkling and would not fit in my sink for me to handwash.
Agree! Life without a dishwasher now would be horrid. I had my first one when we were in our last married quarter in Folkestone, Theseus was in Kent and Canterbury hospital for over a month, and I was working in Bromley. I left home at 5.30 a.m. and wasn't getting back until about 9.30. too tired to do anything.
Once he'd been packed off to Headley Court, (long story) I treated myself to not only a dishwasher but also a microwave oven, and haven't been without either since then.
I bought our first one in the late 1990s . OH was not impressed for along while but eventually realised the usefulness.
We had a Philips which died under a warranty or a service contract. That was replaced by an Indesit. This failed after a couple of months. They tried to repair it but it appeared the just could not get the right part from the given stock number.
We upgraded on their replacement offer and bought a Bosch. Now 13 yes old. The only problem is the crockery rock is losing its prongs to rust and s new one is over £100s This seems a of of money to spend on s very old product which might soon fail.
I love my Dishwasher.
DH always loads and unloads ours as apparently I lack spatial awareness!
I have had dishwashers for about 30 years and agree about Bosch. The other two makes I've had were integrated into units and were not as good as the Bosch ones.
Nobody ever wanted to unload it ( especially teenagers) I timed unloading, under 2 mins!
x
I got my first dishwasher when we had the kitchen refitted about 7 yrs ago. DD' s comment was "Huh, you wait till I've left home" 
I got my first dishwasher 5 years ago, when I was 61.
Love it.
Join the conversation
Registering is free, easy, and means you can join the discussion, watch threads and lots more.
Register now »Already registered? Log in with:
Gransnet »

