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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
handyman
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Although originally intended for the trade, most of these now sell quite happily to the home handyman.
▪ It is still instinctively held that those involved in engineering science should be useful handymen and will have oil on their hands.
▪ President Robert Zeitsiff, who sent the handyman the catalog, said that the firm makes custom fixtures as well.
▪ So, the handyman sends out his patented query: Does anyone out there know where these elusive script numbers are sold?
▪ The handyman has been looking for years, also without success.
▪ The handyman suggested that the faucets should be replaced.
▪ The girl's father, Jack Malone, had worked all his life for the convent as handyman and gardener.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
handyman

1872, from handy + man (n.).

Wiktionary
handyman

n. (context informal English) A man who does small tasks and odd jobs

WordNet
handyman

n. a man skilled in various odd jobs and other small tasks [syn: jack of all trades, odd-job man]

Wikipedia
Handyman

A handyman, also known as a handyperson or handyworker is a person skilled at a wide range of repairs, typically around the home. These tasks include trade skills, repair work, maintenance work, are both interior and exterior, and are sometimes described as "side work," "odd jobs" or "fix-up tasks." Specifically, these jobs could be light plumbing jobs such as fixing a leaky toilet or light electric jobs such as changing a light fixture.

Handyman (TV series)

Handyman is an Australian television series which aired on Melbourne station HSV-7 from 1957 to 1958. Originally hosted by Jack Easton, it was later hosted by Colin Burns. It aired live, and consisted of "hints to the home handyman". It aired in a 15-minute time-slot on Sundays, later moved to Saturdays. It is not known if any of these episodes were kinescoped.

A different Handyman aired on ABV-2 around the same time.

Usage examples of "handyman".

Housekeeper, handyman, messenger, cellarer, paragon of trust and loyalty: Lorenz Beildeck stayed with me till he died.

He had spent an anxious weekend confined to his room at the Handyman Arms partly because he was afraid of missing the telephone call from Miss Boles and partly because he had no intention of leaving the money he had received from Sir Giles in his suitcase or of carrying it around on his person.

One incident after another had managed to delay her flight, two of the most important of them being that handymen and materials with which to repair the cottage were difficult to come by, and not until just over three weeks ago had it become ready.

Andrew watched it, as he went from barn-tunnels to greenhouses, going through the motions of supervising stewards and handymen, with outrage and disbelief.

They were young, all those people gathered beyond the doorway, but haggard and slow to move, handymen, woodworkers, seamstresses, possessed of a rueful nostalgia, perhaps for the prairie womb common to them all, that land too bleak for song to live.

He had also, during that period, employed no less than a dozen people privately, almost all young men and women who passed security muster, some as gardeners and handymen, others as apprentice technicians.

Crazy John burglarized a bowling alley and woke up a live-in handyman named Roger Alan Mosser.

There was even the usual single porter or handyman, in uniform trousers and an old British warm, sweeping the deserted platform.

Apparently he doubled as handyman and short-order cook and, while his pale brown eyes moved over me like slugs, he complained whiningly about how much there was to do around the place getting it ready for closing date and constantly being called away from some job to fry eggs for parties of transients.

Nor had he cared a tinker's damn about Jerry - and considering the handyman had had an insurance policy specifying double indemnity for accidental death (the building's super, with whom Sloat sometimes shared a hashpipe, had passed this little tidbit on to him), Sloat imagined that Nita Bledsoe had done nipups - but he had been nearly frantic about the loss of his key.

A vast rambling building with twenty bedrooms, a ballroom with a sprung floor, a plumbing system that held fascinations for industrial archaeologists but which kept Sir Giles awake at night, and a central heating system that had been designed to consume coke by the ton, and now seemed to gulp oil by the megagallon, Handyman Hall had been built in 1899 to make manifest in bricks, mortar and the more hideous furnishings of the period the fact that the Handyman family had arrived.

And so the program I spent most of my time with was my general science advisor and home handyman, Albert Einstein.

He possessed hammers and screwdrivers, wrenches and pliers, saws and a miter box, a battery-powered drill with an array of bits, screws and nails, rope and wire, brackets of all kinds, and everything else a handyman might need, all of it purchased at Sears when he had realized that properly arranging and displaying each piece in his collection would require the construction of some clever supports and, in a couple of cases, thematic backdrops.

In the yellow pages of the Oswego County telephone book, where he'd placed a small cheery ad both Carpentry and Handyman.

I got him a job, pearl diver and handyman in a small gourmet restaurant, with a side arrangement for pay-me's to the chef for every Valhalla dish Joe learned to cook correctly.