Crossword clues for mailman
mailman
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
mailman \mail"man`\ n. A man who delivers the mail. A male mail carrier.
Syn: postman, mail carrier, letter carrier, carrier.
mail carrier \mail carrier\ n. A person who delivers the mail; -- also called a letter carrier. A male mail carrier is also called a mailman.
Syn: postman, letter carrier, carrier, mailman.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Wiktionary
n. (context US English) someone (implied male) who delivers mail to, and/or collects mail from, residential or commercial addresses, or from public mailboxes
WordNet
n. a man who delivers the mail [syn: postman, mail carrier, letter carrier, carrier]
Wikipedia
A mailman is a person who delivers mail.
Mailman may also refer to:
- Mailman (novel), a 2003 novel by American author J. Robert Lennon
- The Mail Man, a 1993 album by American rapper E-40
- GNU Mailman, mailing list software
- Deborah Mailman (born 1972), Australian actress
- Joseph Mailman, American philanthropist
- Marilyn Mailman Segal, American psychologist
- Karl Malone, former basketball star of the Utah Jazz, whose nickname is "The Mailman"
- "Mailman", a song by Soundgarden from Superunknown
- The Mailman (film), a 2004 psychological thriller film
Usage examples of "mailman".
He reached his ground-floor apartment, checked the battered mailbox cluster, which always got wet when it rained--stupid, dumb damn place to put the damn mailboxes, anyway, mailmen getting lazier and lazier-and then went into the concrete hallway, which stank of fried foods, cat piss, and laundry soap in about equal proportions.
A thin young man of about twenty, wearing a white short-sleeved shirt, brown slacks, a clip-on bow tie, and black shoes that looked like the kind mailmen wear, walked up the front steps and knocked on the door.
There were doctors who had nothing to do but set an occasional broken bone, printers who had no type to set or paper to use, mailmen with no mail to deliver, smiths with no horses to shoe, farmers with no crops to grow, housewives with no children to raise, the food already cooked, housecleaning done in fifteen minutes and no marketing to do, salesmen with nothing to sell, preachers whose religion was thoroughly discredited by the existence of this world, bootleggers with no means of making grain alcohol, buttonmakers with no buttons, pimps and whores whose professions were ruined by an excess of amateurs, mechanics with no autos, admen with no ads, carpetmakers with only grass and bamboo fibers to work with, cowboys without horses or cattle, painters with no paint or canvas, pianists without pianos, railroad men with no iron, stockbrokers with no stocks to deal in, and so on.
It would have been a pleasant room if it wasn't for the certain knowledge that Uncle Harry or Aunt Minnie or Morty the mailman was naked in another part of the house, dead as a doorknob, getting pumped full of formaldehyde.
Billy put down his BB gun and glanced over at the new mailman, curious, but the windows of the red car were tinted, the interior dark, and all he could see was a thin white hand and the sleeve of a blue uniform reaching out from the driver's window to put a stack of letters in the mailbox.
Cox didn't make the best coffee on the route, but the cup was definitely the finest in the valley: thin bone china, much too good for a half-hippie mailman.
Cox didn't make the best coffee on the route, but the cup was definitely the finest in the valley: thin bone china, much too good for a halfhippie mailman.
He had come here to tape up the mail slot in his office door, to make sure that the mailman would not be able to deliver anything to his business address.
I came downstairs in time to see Helen close the door on the mailman.
No doubt he would have fled after Corky’s first visit had he not believed that Corky, as Robin Goodfellow, knew the location of every one of his bolt-holes and would descend on him in his hideaway with a company of cutthroat mailmen who would show no mercy.
One Saturday morning, as I was going to the lumber yard for some material to finish the basement, the mailman handed me the mail.
Larry McLeod, who was the mailman during those years, reported that Marsten got four daily papers, The Saturday Evening Post, The New Yorker, and a pulp magazine called Amazing Stories.
Here was the Rural Free Delivery box, its door slightly ajar, the way both Bobbi and Joe Paulson, the mailman, left it so it would be easier for Peter to paw open.
Dreams in which Billy wore a Postal Service uniform and grinningly accompanied the mailman on his hellishly appointed rounds.