Wiktionary
n. A male member of a guild.
Usage examples of "guildsman".
Here I sit, on this empty bridge above the speeding river as Niana shapes the air with symbols no guildsman would ever recognise.
Ahead of us, clumsily executed in marble by a local craftsman, a robed and bearded statue of God the Elder, the greatest guildsman of them all, gazed down at us.
For Saul, the wrongness of the world had always been obvious, but for me, still at heart a guildsman and forever puzzled at the way things were never quite how they should be, explanations chalked on a bondhouse roof would never be enough.
The guildhall meetings they all troop into to mutter, over fine wines that would pay to feed fifteen starving families, about how the average guildsman is fundamentally lazy .
I have a small gathering of fellow seekers planned for later this evening, and quite frankly, a guildsman such as I could do with an escort.
The centre of attention was circular marble fishpond beside which a tall guildsman was handing out crystal cups.
When I regained my balance, my hands scrabbling along the walls, all that was left of my dark guildsman was a twirl of engine ice and London rubbish.
Greatgrandmaster Penfold, who was then generally reckoned to be the second most prominent guildsman in the realm .
I performed for Greatgrandmaster Penfold, you know, who was generally reckoned to be the second most prominent guildsman in England, and certainly the wittiest.
And that crimson dress which Anna had brought, which was vast and low at the front and high on the arms, and thus wildly inappropriate, was transformed, with the addition of a borrowed belt and the sacrifice of a blouse, into a tighter and more modest outfit which would have made any Bracebridge guildmistress, and this particular guildsman who walked into lowtown beside her, entirely proud.
The brave guildsman stamped on it until it was dead, then, in the absence of any nearby servants, managed to scoop it up using the tureen whilst several guests retired to be more or less ostentatiously sick.
I heard that a high guildsman named Passington had come to Bracebridge, when the very air whispered to me that the stone itself had returned, I knew that something strange, magical, was about to happen.
Whatever that bastard Guildsman was up to, he had locked himself in but good.
The Guildsman turned to the door, adjusted his instrument, and fired again.
The Guildsman returned to his duties then, as quietly and as calmly as if nothing had happened at all.