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Wiktionary
caulker

n. 1 A person who caulks various structures (as ships) and certain types of piping 2 A tool used for caulking ships; a caulking iron

Wikipedia
Caulker

Caulker may refer to:

  • Caulking
  • Caulking (video games)
  • Caulker (surname)
  • Caye Caulker, an island in the Caribbean Sea
Caulker (surname)

Caulker is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Usage examples of "caulker".

Even the skin and withy coracle, normally used to hold a caulker working around a larger vessel, was fine by him.

It would ring for some time, calling the shipwrights, carpenters, and caulkers to work.

Most of them were just caulkers, not even thugs like the Matteoni brothers.

That just about described all the boatmen, caulkers and fishermen of Venice.

To make matters worse, the girl is a well-known canaler from a large family of caulkers at the Arsenal.

The Minerve now had jury topmasts and the Nereide something in the way of a main and a mizen, while caulkers and carpenters were busy about them both: the Iphigenia had already sailed.

The caulkers back in Venice were undoubtedly going to be grateful for the improvement in the quality of deck planking.

Even as a tiny child, she had known that Umberto followed her mother with his eyes every single time she was anywhere around the docks where the caulkers worked.

The post usually went to one of the master-carpenters from the Arsenal, which the caulkers technically were, but normally it went to one of the more prestigious guilds, not to the poor-relation caulkers.

Even as a tiny child, she had known that Umberto followed her mother with his eyes every single time she was anywhere around the docks where the caulkers worked.

The post usually went to one of the master-carpenters from the Arsenal, which the caulkers technically were, but normally it went to one of the more prestigious guilds, not to the poor-relation caulkers.

Dakar recog nized a ropewalker, a handful of caulkers, and two doxies twined through the arms of a suspiciously familiar sailhand.