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Answer for the clue "A person whose occupation is catching lobsters ", 10 letters:
lobsterman

Word definitions for lobsterman in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a person whose occupation is catching lobsters

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A fisherman for lobsters.

Usage examples of lobsterman.

A man walked up from the harbor in rubber boots, a slicker over his shoulder: a lobsterman coming back from work.

Hatch remembered that thirty years before, a lobsterman pulling traps had seen a nude sunbather on their beach.

Olive remarked that she thought the daughter of a mechanic and lobsterman would be less sensitive to strong odors, and when she suggested that Candy might be more comfortable working in the fields, Candy admitted that climbing trees also made her feel queasy.

Tonight the lobsterman was there, with an ancient woman who could only be his mother, and the Pissants, and two teenage couples, long blonde hair and sunburned, reeking of marijuana and summer money.

The Ant rolled the gate back, standing in one place and pulling with vigorous hand over hand motions that would have done a lobsterman proud.

A little before dawn a lobsterman came down to the dock to put out to sea.

Not only was it becoming impossible for a lobsterman to earn a good living in Maine, but it was no longer safe to have a convivial beer with a stranger.

And those fishermen and lobstermen among you might wonder if all this has anything to do with the lobster catch being off twenty percent recently, and the mackerel run down almost as much.

Raymond Kendall was so good at lobstering that other lobstermen, through binoculars, watched him pull and bait a pot.

I want you to go find all the other lobstermen and tell them not to use that area.

As with most veteran lobstermen, he went through his end-of-day routine with all the forethought of a spider building its web.

It was four hours southeast of Key West, further than lobstermen normally ventured on a one-day trip.

Sharpe was close enough to the bluffs edge to sec the French lobstermen pulling on long oars to escape the sucking undertow at the cliffs ragged base.

What large fools those lobstermen must have thought us to be prowling through that gruel.