handle
also called handle type
The handle/grip configuration of a tool you hold and work with — a fixed (integral) handle, a detachable/screw-fit handle (the threaded broom handle sold separately and screwed into the head), a telescopic/extendable handle (a cobweb or floor tool that reaches), or none/handheld (a hand scrub brush, a cloth). It is a GENERAL structural property (not cleaning-specific: a saucepan, a bucket and a mop all have a handle), so it is minted once and re-declared on each kind that has a handle rather than duplicated per family or forced onto root Product (a t-shirt has no handle) — the b106 `shape` precedent. On a cleaning tool it captures the broom-vs-brush reach distinction (telescopic/detachable vs none) that is a value here, not a structural split. Concern facet (a nominal categorical descriptor, axis-eligible — a tool genuinely offered with or without a handle is a legitimate seller choice). Optional: handle-less tools (a hand brush, a scourer, a cloth) take the value 'no handle' or leave it unfilled.
Handle is answered with one word chosen from the handle types list — the same word shared across every product that uses it.
It belongs to facet — one facet of a product.