The difference between broom and broom

First, the main raw materials are different.

Broom [tiáo zhǒu] Raw materials: sorghum rice, Kochia scoparia, brown silk, reed, coconut palm silk, plastic silk and other materials.

Broom 【 sào zhǒu 】 Raw materials: sorghum spike, Japanese groundsel, bamboo shoots, broom grass, etc.

Second, the use is different.

Broom is a tool for sweeping the floor and removing dust. It is made of bamboo branches, which is bigger than a broom.

It is a tool that people use to sweep away sundries every day, which is equivalent to a broom.

Third, the process flow is different.

Broom: selecting materials → dropping seeds → removing leaf sheaths → laying flat on the ground after finishing → softening → dedusting and wetting → fastening → shelling → sulfur fumigation → finished products.

Broom: selecting materials → dropping seeds → removing leaf sheaths → sorting and laying flat on the ground → softening → wetting with water → binding and fastening → removing broken shells → sulfur fumigation → finished products.

Both are the same: they are used for cleaning.

Extended data:

Broom status quo

Today, brooms made of sorghum stalks are widely used in Europe, Asia and most parts of the world. In order to develop agriculture, American President Franklin advocated planting sorghum, so sorghum was planted all over the United States.

One day, an old farmer in Hadley needed a new broom. He cut some sorghum stalks and tied one with a rope. Both durable and easy to use, so everyone followed suit and began to use sorghum brooms, which led to the emergence of sorghum broom manufacturing in the United States. Until now, the broom is still in use. Many functions have been replaced by vacuum cleaners.