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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
glazier
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Also patron of cooks, cutlers, glaziers, the poor, and restaurateurs.
▪ The rapport among masons, glaziers, painters, mosaicists and metal workers was complete and satisfying.
▪ This remarkable display is the work of the William Morris artists and glaziers from London.
▪ Three CSEs are what he took to his job at a glaziers.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Glazier

Glazier \Gla"zier\, n. [From Glaze.] One whose business is to set glass.

Glazier's diamond. See under Diamond.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
glazier

late 14c. (late 13c. as a surname; alternative glazer recorded from c.1400), from glass + -er (1), influenced by French words in -ier.

Wiktionary
glazier

n. One who glazes; a craftsman who works with glass, fitting windows, etc.

WordNet
glazier

n. someone who cuts flat glass to size [syn: glass cutter, glass-cutter, glassworker, glazer]

Wikipedia
Glazier

A glazier is a skilled tradesman responsible for cutting, installing, and removing glass (and materials used as substitutes for glass, such as some plastics). Glaziers may work with glass in various surfaces and settings, such as windows, doors, shower doors, skylights, storefronts, display cases, mirrors, facades, interior walls, ceilings, and tabletops.

Glazier (surname)

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

  • Alan Glazier (born 1939), retired English darts player
  • Kenneth MacLean Glazier, Sr. (1912–1989), Canadian minister and librarian
  • Rick Glazier (21st century), Democratic member of the North Carolina General Assembly
  • Teresa Ferster Glazier (1907–2004), American nonfiction writer
Glazier (Hampshire cricketer)

Glazier (first name and dates unknown) was an English cricketer who played in first-class cricket for Hambledon and Hampshire during the 1760s. He is recorded in the Caterham v. Hambledon match at Guildford Bason in July 1769.

As Glazier had established his reputation by 1768, he must have been active for some years previously and his career may have begun in the 1750s. He is not mentioned in 1770s reports and very few players were mentioned by name in contemporary reports before then. There are no other references to Glazier.

Usage examples of "glazier".

Woodcarvers and carpenters, potters, glaziers, tanners and cobblers and saddlemakers, goldsmiths and stonemasons, coopers, wainwrights, and especially Grijalva Limnersmasters of every craft waited nervously for the outcome of fierce competition.

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.

I represent an alliance of other guilds: glaziers, rope-makers, carpenters, smiths and most of the local merchants, and we refused to pay.

Makri, who is busier than ever, with thirsty bricklayers, roofers, glaziers and architects clamouring for drinks all day.

Outside that armed barrier all the household would be gathered, and all the workmen who had built the church, the plumbers, the glaziers, the masons, the joiners, the clerks and draughtsmen, the labourers.

Consequently, on election day, in the church where the primary meeting is held, two of the Feuillants, Laurède, formerly collector of the vingtièmes,, and Brunache, a glazier, propose to exclude an intruder, a servant on wages.

No viral rain of death virus to mow down millions and feed the glazier beam when it arrives.