Respuesta :
Answer:
- dishes that are old and worn
Explanation:
"Plain chipware on a plain and squeaking wood,/Tin flatware." "Chipware" is Brooks' very own coinage, adjusted from "dinnerware." "Dinnerware" suggests Wealth, benefit, and style, while "chipware" indicates old, worn-out dishes used by poor people; yet "chipware" additionally calls up the dignity of "dinnerware."