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Definition of Ping-pong table
1. Noun. A table used for playing table tennis.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Ping-pong Table
Literary usage of Ping-pong table
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Ping-pong: (registered Trademark U.S. No. 36,854). The Game and how to Play it by Arnold Parker (1902)
"The tops can be made to shut up without the net and posts being removed; in fact,
it is no more difficult to fit up the Ping-Pong table than to put a cloth ..."
2. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1920)
"See PING- PONG. TABLE MOUNTAIN, Cape Colony, Africa, a flat-topped mountain with
nearly perpendicular sides, situated just south of Cape Town. ..."
3. Correct Social Usage: A Course of Instruction in Good Form, Style and Deportment by George Rippey Stewart (1906)
"Should your establishment not be large enough to afford space for a ping pong
table other than your mahogany ..."
4. An Onlooker in France, 1917-1919 by William Orpen (1921)
"Have you a ping-pong table here ?" He was the little unknown boy at the 56th
Squadron with whom I used to play ping-pong only a few months before. ..."
5. An Onlooker in France, 1917-1919 by William Orpen (1921)
"... I heard a cheery voice below and someone came bounding upstairs, and before
I saw him he shouted : " Hello, Orps I Have you a ping-pong table here ? ..."
6. The Economic Review by Christian Social Union (Great Britain), Oxford University Branch (1904)
"From the proceeds we bought, of the village carpenter, a splendid " ping-pong "
table for 20.?. This was placed on the school desks for play, ..."