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Answer for the clue "Someone whose occupation is apply an overlay of gold or gilt ", 6 letters:
gilder

Alternative clues for the word gilder

Word definitions for gilder in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Gilder may refer to:

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Gilder \Gil"der\, n. A Dutch coin. See Guilder .

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. someone whose occupation is apply an overlay of gold or gilt

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
Etymology 1 n. One who gilds; one whose occupation is to overlay with gold. Etymology 2 n. (context uncommon English) (alternative spelling of guilder English)

Usage examples of gilder.

Madam Anna Bishop was making her American tour, she included San Francisco, and with her troupe came also Alfred Wilkie, tenor, and Frank Gilder of New York, an organist and pianist of high repute.

The older musicians challenged Gilder to play the music of the old masters.

The Silver Cornet band was under the direction of Professor Henry von der Mehden and Frank Gilder, pianist.

I had a previous engagement with Frank Gilder at Santa Cruz for his concert a day or two before the flag raising.

While he was busy with the breakfast, the stranger, who said his name was Gilder, talked pleasantly on many subjects.

Seems to me that Gilder must have been a pretty patient sort of a boy to learn to cook the way he does.

Messrs Gilder and Plater had gone into the town to familiarize themselves with its localities, while Grimshaw was left to look out for the raft.

Richard Watson Gilder, poet and editor of The Century, sent her a volume of his verse and a few weeks later a poem about Helen whose last stanzas bespoke the effect she had on those who saw her: Sight brings she to the seeing, New song to those that hear Her braver spirit sounding Where mortals fail and fear.

Louis Exposition, Gilder had suggested that she do an essay on the hand.

The additions were not made, but Gilder was asked whether he might not be interested in a book by Helen about her ways of knowing her world.

In July 1909, less than a year after she had finished The World I Live In, John sent the poem to Gilder and asked five hundred dollars for it.

It annoyed her always to have to write about herself, to have editors, even good friends like Gilder, warn her off matters not related to her personal experience.

Henry Van Dyke, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward, and Richard Watson Gilder for special permission to reproduce, in this Reader, selections from their writings.

CHAPTER 114 The Gilder Penetrating further and further into the heart of the Japanese cruising ground the Pequod was soon all astir in the fishery.

Kofod Ancher, Om gamle Danske Gilder og deres Undergang, Copenhagen, 1785.