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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Glassmaker

Glass maker \Glass" mak`er\, or Glassmaker \Glass"mak`er\, n. One who makes, or manufactures, glass. -- Glass" mak`ing, or Glass"mak`ing, n.

Wiktionary
glassmaker

n. A person or company that makes glass or glass items

WordNet
glassmaker

n. some who makes glass

Usage examples of "glassmaker".

Learning how to make stained glass took a few months longer, and then only because I was able to hire a French glassmaker to show us how it was done.

I can see the headlines in the local paper: Drunken glassmaker accidentally, burns down workshop and cabin.

In the short term, USE glassmakers will keep careful records as to which raw materials were mixed together, in what proportions, to obtain a particular batch of glass, and the physical and chemical properties evidenced by that glass.

Grantville glass companies can make glass production more predictable by purifying the silica and the glass modifiers, so that the glassmakers know just how much of each ingredient they are adding to the melt.

The publication of the glassmakers saw value in new territories that would buy glass.

The sash windows were narrow and glazed with small diamond panes, another sign that the house had been built in a previous century before glassmakers had learned to roll larger plates.

People rarely visit that bay except for glassmakers needing sand or fisherfolk like the ones who spotted your briq.

Mistress Harfor, informed that she would have to handle the glassmakers, and the other delegations as well, grimaced faintly even as she inclined her head in acceptance.

Dyers and weavers devoured alum, and so did glassmakers and papermakers among others.

The masons, the glassmakers, the carpenters, the weavers of rugs, they are all part of the building of it.

We will be coaxing Venetian and Thuringian glassmakers to make chemically resistant borosilicate glass, importing and refining Japanese zinc, and producing a variety of industrial chemicals.

There were smiths and weavers and potters, woodwrights, masons, glaziers, tanners, chandlers, shoe and harness makers, lute and lyre makers, fullers, spinners, rug makers, wagonwrights, carvers, founders, tinkers, coopers, toolmakers, brickmakers, glassmakers, stonecutters, dyers, and enamelers.