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A creator of great skill in the manual arts
Answer for the clue "A creator of great skill in the manual arts ", 9 letters:
craftsman
Alternative clues for the word craftsman
Word definitions for craftsman in dictionaries
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
mid-14c., craftes man , originally "a member of a craft guild," from genitive of craft (n.) + man (n.1). Written as one word from late 14c. Old English had cræftiga in this sense. Related: Craftsmanship .
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a professional whose work is consistently of high quality; "as an actor he was a consummate craftsman" a creator of great skill in the manual arts; "the jewelry was made by internationally famous craftsmen" [syn: crafter ] a skilled worker who practices ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A male artisan.
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES Skilled craftsmen ▪ Skilled craftsmen , such as carpenters, are in great demand. COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE fine ▪ I felt so proud of my father for having been such a fine craftsman . ▪ Mudge had an earned ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Craftsman \Crafts"man\ (kr?fts"man), n.; pl. Craftsmen (-men). One skilled in some trade or manual occupation; an artificer; a mechanic.
Usage examples of craftsman.
After that they moved in the immigrants, the Sephardic Jews from Spain, Belgian and French craftsmen, then the Ashkenazi Jews from Eastern Europe.
Lesser craftsmen were confined to making routine blocks for smaller houses and paving stones for the streets.
Lines of hooks above the chimneypiece had been used, as I surmise, to support arms, for the wealthy merchants of England were wont to keep enough in their houses to at least equip their apprentices and craftsmen.
Here, craftsmen continue to make copperware as in the past, keeping only their best pieces and melting the rest to avoid overcrowding their displays.
Anglo-Saxon decorative art employed in the south of England an animal-style influenced by the Irish, and in the north a particularly fruitful motif borrowed from Syrian craftsmen who had immigrated to northern England -- namely regularly curving ornament, vine-scroll with animals -- either leaping, climbing, or flying -- decoratively disposed within it.
They have been known to bypass the great and mighty to slay a farmwife or a craftsman, or to enter a town or village and leave without killing, though clearly they came for some reason.
South, to locate and hire, or buy, the best available slave artisans and craftsmen, masons, carpenters, ironworkers, and plasterers to build The Forks of Cypress.
Wooden cherubs on clouds cavort around the velvet cushion in the back, carved in fruitwood and gold-leafed by some French craftsman.
The army of craftsmen, meteorologists, artists, rhetoricians, futurologists, sun Warlocks, data patterners, intuitionists, vasteners and devasteners, who formed the company and crew of the Solar Array and all its subsidiaries, were flown or radioed away, called to celebrate in the Grand Transcendence.
East Indian agricultural experts always fighting starvation and fighting a depleted land, and Ibo craftsmen who could handle too much water on the crops.
From the first two snippets, however, he learned that plans for war with the North were well advanced: if the shipyards and the craftsmen were kept so busy, then the Istrian Council had clearly given orders for the preparations of a fleet.
He conferred with the ministers to provide the new population with magistrates, priests, a governor, craftsmen of all kinds to build churches and houses, and especially a bull-ring, a necessity for the Spaniards, but a perfectly useless provision as far as the simple Swiss were concerned.
Tibet of Newar craftsmen from Nepal where copper statuary has long been traditional particularly because copper gives a better surface for fire-gilding.
Lost wax casting is still practised in Nepal, where it was probably brought from India, and is traditional among certain classes of Newar craftsmen.
Though made by Arabic master craftsmen, the pieces bore traces of their Indian and Persian ancestry.