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File:Pocket-knife.jpg
A simple penknife

Penknife, or pen knife, is a small folding knife.<ref name="EB1770-1"/> Today penknife is also the common British English term for both a pocketknife, which can have single or multiple blades, and for multi-tools, with additional tools incorporated into the design.<ref name="Moore1988"/>

HistoryEdit

Originally, penknives were used for thinning and pointing quills (cf. penna, Latin for feather) to prepare them for use as dip pens and, later, for repairing or re-pointing the nib.<ref name="EB1770-1"/> A penknife might also be used to sharpen a pencil,<ref name="Machen1895"/> prior to the invention of the pencil sharpener. In the mid-1800s, penknives were necessary to slice the uncut edges of newspapers and books.<ref name="Flanders2014"/>

A penknife did not necessarily have a folding blade, but might resemble a scalpel or chisel by having a short, fixed blade at the end of a long handle.Template:Cn

During the 20th century there has been a proliferation of multi-function pocketknives with assorted blades and gadgets,<ref name="Shackleford2010"/> the most famous of which is the Swiss Army knife, referred to in British English as penknives.

A larger folding knife than a penknife, especially one in which the blade locks into place as a protection, as for skinning animals, is referred to by some as a claspknife.<ref name="Shackleford2010"/>

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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<ref name="Flanders2014">Template:Cite book</ref>

<ref name="Shackleford2010">Template:Cite book</ref>

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