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Answer for the clue "Work made of iron (gratings or rails or railings etc) ", 8 letters:
ironwork

Alternative clues for the word ironwork

Word definitions for ironwork in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Ironwork is any weapon , artwork , utensil or architectural feature made of iron especially used for decoration. There are two main types of ironwork: wrought iron and cast iron . While the use of iron dates as far back as 4000BC, it was the Hittites who ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
early 15c., from iron (n.) + work (n.).

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ All internal ironwork and insides of gangways were painted with aluminium paint. ▪ And they drooled over its yellow and blue ironwork . ▪ He had stood in front of it and pinched himself, observing the intricacy of the ironwork ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Ironwork \I"ron*work`\, n. Anything made of iron; -- a general name of such parts or pieces of a building, vessel, carriage, etc., as consist of iron.

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. work made of iron (gratings or rails or railings etc); "the houses had much ornamental ironwork"

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. Anything made wholly or largely of iron, especially when used for decoration.

Usage examples of ironwork.

Later it passed to a crippled knight named Long Jon Heddle, who took up ironworking when he grew too old to fight.

His body slid under me, only one of his hands maintaining a hold on the ironwork, his back against the stone slabs of the tilted kerb side and for a moment just one fleeting moment I thought I had him licked.

It towered over Cracia, the largest and oldest city on Pyrites, a three thousand metre ironwork tower, raised four hundred years before, partly to honour the Emperor but mostly to celebrate the engineering skill of the Pyriteans.

I followed them and one of the Scrappers to the sewer drain over there by the old ironworks plant, right?

With him she studied fine ironwork, shaping metal into lacelike forms: between the Syth and the Pebbled Sea, Teraud was the best at it.

Frederik was still contentedly peering through the ironwork at the activity below when Cneajna, Eupraxia, and Smaranda dropped their handiwork and jumped up so they could curtsy to the most eligible bachelor in the dukedom as he strolled out onto the balcony.

There was a table in the little room, with an empty platter and a large flagon atop it, and a bench filled with ironworking tools: tongs, hammers, and the like.

With him she studied fine ironwork, shaping metal into lacelike forms: between the Syth and the Pebbled Sea, Teraud was the best at it.

Hakonin guarded the wagons with their precious siege engines, supplies, extra weapons, treasure and loot, and the ironworks that could be set up as forges in a semipermanent camp.

Scrub pines, rusty ironwork, a maze of tumble-down tombstones with inscriptions that only the thistles and wild oats could read.

Valore, and led the way over the steep roots of trees, among the sweet-scented myrtles, and so right up to a door bound with black ironwork.

Unaltered was the triangle of streets where slums and public houses and brothels and cheap hotels had driven out those residents who could afford being driven out, where chalky steam gushed from pipes bending outward from glass and ironworks, where sidewalks were littered with orange peels and filled with mirthful singing and dancing at odd hours.

In the middle of the street Father Concha paused and looked up, nodding as if to an old friend at the sight of a dingy piece of palm bound to the ironwork of a balcony on the second floor.

Directly behind Nicholas was a block of upper-class apartments with a row of arabesqued lintels under the second floor windows and an ornamental ironwork fence along the street level.

The future management of his extensive ironworks being thus placed in able hands, Richard Reynolds finally left Coalbrookdale in 1804, for Bristol, his native town, where he spent the remainder of his life in works of charity and mercy.