Examples of using Tupperware in English and their translations into Hindi
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
Free Tupperware.
Tupperware Home Parties.
She likes her Tupperware.
Tupperware Home Parties.
You need good tupperware.
Tupperware meals my mom packed for us.
I have already bought Tupperware.
Tupperware ladies” weren't company employees;
Thank you for returning my Tupperware.
But the real problem with Tupperware was that it was made of plastic.
I only ask you to return the Tupperware.
In the process, Tupperware ladies became a 1950s cultural force in their own right.
Even the Stanley salespeople knew it,and that was why growing numbers of them were adding Tupperware to their Stanley offerings.
Some people even returned their Tupperware, complaining that the lids didn't fit.
They could sell Tupperware part-time while they raised their families, and their careers weren't threatening to their husbands in an era when the man was still expected to be the sole breadwinner in the family.
Prep your meals and put them in Tupperware in the freezer for the week.
Meanwhile, sales of Tupperware were growing so quickly that the company was on track to become a $100 million-a-year company(~$823 million today) by 1960.
In April 1951, he hired Wise andmade her a vice president of a brand-new division called Tupperware Home Parties, headquartered in Kissimmee, Florida.
Today the word Tupperware is a generic term for any plastic food container with a sealable lid.
A year later he patented the idea that he's most famous for: the“Tupperware seal,” which provided a spill-proof, airtight seal between Tupperware containers and their lids.
Tupperware sales consultants bring products, introduce new product lines, answer questions about warranties and replacements and gather names and contact information from new customers for future sales.
Some plastics canaffect fertility in men and women, even those found in Tupperware and cling film, so limit how much you expose yourself to toxins this way when you are trying to get pregnant.
They bought a lot of it, too: Tupperware sold so well at home parties that many Stanley salespeople were abandoning the company entirely and selling nothing but Tupperware.
Though Wise had made him a millionaire many times over, and had served as the public face of Tupperware at his own request, Tupper grew increasingly resentful that she seemed to receive all the credit for making Tupperware the huge success that it was.
Part of the problem with Tupperware was that a lot of consumers couldn't figure out how to work the lids.
And yet for all the advantages that Tupperware had to offer, it just sat on store shelves, even when Tupper promoted the launch with national advertising.
Every 1.75 seconds, one of them hosts another Tupperware party somewhere in the world, using the sales techniques that Brownie Wise perfected more than a half century ago.
And in the process she andher ever-expanding sales force helped to turn Tupperware from a product that nobody wanted into one of the most iconic brands in American business history, as well known as Kleenex, Jell-O, Xerox, Frisbee, and Band-Aid.
As Earl Tupper pored over the dismal sales figures, he noticed that Tupperware was popular with two types of customers: 1 mental hospitals, which preferred Tupperware cups and dishes to aluminum because they didn't dent or make noise when patients threw them on the floor;
By the early 1950s, she was ordering more than $150,000 worth of Tupperware a year(about $1.5 million today) for the sizable home party sales force she would built up, this at a time when Earl Tupper couldn't sell Tupperware in department stores no matter how hard he tried.