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The Collaborative International Dictionary
glassblower

glassblower \glass"blow*er\, glass blower \glass" blow*er\n. 1. someone skilled creating objects such as bottles, vases, or other decorative or practical items from molten glass, especially one whose occupation is to make objects by blowing and shaping hot glass in its viscous semiliquid state.

Wiktionary
glassblower

n. A person skilled in the art of glassblowing.

WordNet
glassblower

n. someone skilled in blowing bottles from molten glass

Usage examples of "glassblower".

Captain Circot was like to track him down, I think, only he wed into an Isla Vitrari family, and those glassblowers protect their own.

The glassblower gently wrapped his square, blunt-fingered hands around the willing dragon and sat on a stool, steadying Chime on his knees.

The glassblower, still in a mood for revenge, delivered a merciless lecture on the art of optical glass making.

The glass creature leaped clear before the glassblower could shatter it with a second blow.

As we have seen Nature anticipating the plasterer in fibro-cartilage, so we see her beforehand with the glassblower in her dealings with the cell.

I got a double-sized research crew going on light bulbs: a glassblower, a machinist, and four apprentices.

They say the old glassblower was three hundred years old by then and had been to places no one else had ever been nor ever will be either.

She thanked the glassblower politely in Rejoicer and promised to return on Debem Opp Chorr to examine the samples.

There were swordsmiths, pottery-makers, armorers, jewelers, leatherworkers, astrologers, bootmakers, glassblowers, and dozens of other trades mentioned, as well as some that had no word for them in Polish.

Nick Minski to a number of glassblowers back home to find out what sort of dye is wanted.

Yarim Paar was a grand building, housing the largest trade association in the province, a confederation of tile artisans, ceramicists, and glassblowers, as well as smiths of all sorts.

They swooped above the workshops of potters and rooftile makers and weavers and carpenters and metalsmiths and boatwrights and armorers and glassblowers and sculptors.

At once Madoc had set about building a fleet of ships and recruiting strong and able men and women to colonize larghal: carpenters and masons, weavers, farmers, shepherds, fishermen and hunters, ironsmiths, potters, charcoal burners, kiln makers, tanners and cobblers, glassblowers, jewelers and armorers, priests and scribes.

The great maritime republics of Venice and Genoa still brought to Europe the cargoes of the East, the Italian network of banking and credit still buzzed with inĀ­ visible business, the weavers of Florence, the armorers of Milan, the glassblowers of Venice, the artisans of Tuscany still pursued their crafts under red-tiled roofs.

Another stack represented industry: iron foundries, fulling mills, jewelry shops, armories, glassblowers.