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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Plowman

Plowman \Plow"man\, Ploughman \Plough"man\, n.; pl. -men.

  1. One who plows, or who holds and guides a plow; hence, a husbandman.
    --Chaucer. Macaulay.

  2. A rustic; a countryman; a field laborer.

    Plowman's spikenard (Bot.), a European composite weed ( Conyza squarrosa), having fragrant roots.
    --Dr. Prior.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
plowman

also plow-man, c.1300, from plow + man (n.).

Wiktionary
plowman

alt. A male plower, who plows land with a plough. n. A male plower, who plows land with a plough.

WordNet
plowman

n. a man who plows [syn: ploughman, plower]

Wikipedia
Plowman (surname)

Plowman is an occupational surname based on plowman, the user of a plow. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Anna-Louise Plowman (born c. 1972), New Zealand actress
  • Arthur J. Plowman (1872-1942), American politician
  • Sir Anthony Plowman (1905–1993) Vice-Chancellor of the High Court
  • Jon Plowman (born 1953), British television producer
  • Jonathan Plowman Jr. (1717–1795), American revolutionary
  • Mark Plowman (The Messengers), fictional character
  • Max Plowman (1883–1941), British writer and pacifist
  • Thomas S. Plowman (1843–1919), American politician
  • Tony Plowman (born 1939), Australian politician
  • Vincent Plowman, fictional character

Usage examples of "plowman".

They were all herdsmen and plowmen, they knew a thing or two about cattle: which goat or bull to couple with which she-goat or cow to get the strongest young and make the herd thrive.

One by one, Jodi and Beaker took the youngest of the geldings into the exercise yard and ran them through the training routine, only turning them over to the plowmen when they were sure that the horses understood what they were being asked to do.

Strip it of these embarrassments, vest it in the Roman type which we have adopted instead of our English black letter, reform its uncouth orthography, and assimilate its pronunciation, as much as may be, to the present English, just as we do in reading Piers Plowman or Chaucer, and with the cotemporary vocabulary for the few lost words, we understand it as we do them.

The Anarchist pamphlet to which he refers is entitled The Russian Myth, and the editor of the Adelphi during the earlier part of the war was not John Middleton Murry, but the late Max Plowman.