Search for crossword answers and clues
A person who makes articles of iron
Answer for the clue "A person who makes articles of iron ", 10 letters:
ironworker
Alternative clues for the word ironworker
Word definitions for ironworker in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a person who makes articles of iron
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Ironworker is a class of machines that can shear, notch, and punch holes in steel plate. There may have been a brand name called Ironworker. The name is now used to refer to the whole class of machines (made by at least a dozen brands, such as Piranha, ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 A person employed to manufacture and shape iron. 2 A construction worker who assembles the metal frame of buildings.
Usage examples of ironworker.
Dixon of Bothell, an apprentice ironworker, apparently became entangled in a welding lead and fell from the 43rd story of the new building, which is scheduled for completion late next year.
I had discovered that Don Kaplan, someone I knew, if only slightly, was a person I could talk to in order to learn more about the ironworker apprenticeship program.
Tulsa and sharing an apartment with Stan Wilkins, an ironworker four years his junior.
He was an ironworker, a tough union man with a record of marijuana possessions but nothing violent.
He was raising his two daughters, working full-time as an ironworker, and hoping the police were history when they arrived one day in January 1986 with an arrest warrant for first-degree murder, punishable by death.
There was something about ironworkers that had been trying to nose its way into my consciousness ever since Merrilee Jackson had read the word to me off the glinting belt buckle.
There was even a quote, attributed to Martin Green, Executive Director of Ironworkers Local 165, saying that part of the problem was due to a lack of building inspections by the state.
The building directory told me Ironworkers Local 165 was located on the second floor.
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.
There were ironworkers, once known as smithies, and ferrous engineers, and platers, and ironmasters whose hands sometimes turned black and scabby, and enginewrights and finishers with missing fingers, all tangled together through processes which the foremen and the managers, themselves members of other guilds, or higher branches of the same ones, strove to control and contain.
Cirocco discussed pitons with the ironworkers, who came back with their best efforts.