Wiktionary
n. (plural of guildsman English)
Usage examples of "guildsmen".
A wind had dispelled the heat wave that had lingered, according to the natives, unusually long into the autumn season, so it was no hardship to pass the afternoon in gossip and splendor as petitioners came and went, most of them artisans and guildsmen fashioning the many trappings and the great feast that would accompany the coronation.
He blessed each of the castes, welcoming the nobles and priests, the soldiers, the guildsmen, the merchants, the Touched.
A Touched woman should not order about nobles, should not issue commands to merchants and soldiers and guildsmen, to the king of all Morenia.
Six months to raise a fortune, when he already owed the church, when he already was committed to paying carpenters and merchants, guildsmen and leeches.
What stories of the Thousand Gods, and kings and guildsmen and players?
As the guildsmen and instructors recognized the wolves in their midst, they attempted to shelter the children.
A collective cry came from the guildsmen, and Rani felt the power that was released as the leaden frame crumpled against the floor.
They were no longer the guildsmen they had been since birth, unless they could find some brother guild brave or foolish enough to take in a putative traitor.
If you throw one of these guildsmen out, it may be six months before you can replace him.
It was a Wednesday, which meant the Museum was closed to the public, and most of the senior Guildsmen and First and Second Class Apprentices would be having the day off.
Senior Guildsmen usually preferred to sit in the comfort of the office and let the apprentices do the hard work down in the heat and fumes, but here was Valentine pulling off his black robes, clipping a pen into the pocket of his waistcoat, pausing to grin at Tom from the doorway.
There were big glass doors opening on to Top Tier, and two Guildsmen standing guard.
The Guildsmen were already startled by the sudden ringing of the alarm bell.
They differ in every respect--melodic, rhythmic, and harmonic,--from those which stand for the old guildsmen and their rule-of-thumb notions.