awelxtr 18 hours ago

In Castilian Spanish it's called "imperdible" which means unlossable/unmissable, which results in the ironic occurrence of finding a lost one or losing yours.

mikewarot 20 hours ago

I have a huge (4 inches/10 cm) brass safety pin with a number stamped into it. Apparently these were once used to tag bags of laundry in the military and industry.

dvh 21 hours ago

"zicherka" (how is it called in your country?)

  • bandie91 19 hours ago

    Hungarian:

    "zicherájsz tű" [zixɛra:ʲs ty:] < "zicher" (Deutsch) + "tű" in Hungarian meaning "pin"

    "biztostű" [bistoʃ ty:] in de-germanized form and "biztosító tű" [bistoʃi:to: ty:] in more formal register.

    • bandie91 16 hours ago

      sorry, it's "sicher" in German

  • jqr- 14 hours ago

    "Seguro" in Mexico. It also means "certain", "safe", or "sure".

  • cue_the_strings 17 hours ago

    "ziherica" or "zihernaldla" from german sicherheitsnadel. We also have a direct translation of 'safety pin'.

lifestyleguru 18 hours ago

Its history is impressive but I used safety pin maybe few times in my lifetime and fail to see a single practical use nowadays, opposite to e.g. matchstick.

  • thomc 18 hours ago

    I have used them for the following:

    * Holding a bandage in place

    * Temporary clothing fix (broken fly, broken strap)

    * Keeping hotel curtains together to block out light

    * Popping a SIM tray

    * Pinning something inside clothing when travelling in risky areas

    It is rare to need one, but they take up no space so I pop one in my bag.*

    • euroderf 9 hours ago

      Some overlap with small binder clips.