Crossword clues for purser
purser
- Ship's money-handler
- Ship's finance officer
- Stewards' superior
- Shipboard treasurer
- Ship's officer attending to the welfare of passengers
- Officer on a ship
- Officer in charge of the stewards
- Money minder at sea
- Money handler on a ship
- Maritime money man
- Cruise treasurer
- Cruise officer
- Cruise accountant
- Accountant at sea
- Chief flight attendant
- An officer aboard a ship who keeps accounts and attends to the passengers' welfare
- Ship official
- Cruise personage
- Cruise bigwig
- Accounts officer on a ship
- Ship's officer responsible for the accounts
- Ship's officer looking after the passengers
- Ship’s officer errs, up for correction
- Naval paymaster
- Ship's officer
- Ship officer
- Ship's treasurer
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Purser \Purs"er\, n. [See Purse, and cf. Bursar.]
(Naut.) A commissioned officer in the navy who had charge of the provisions, clothing, and public moneys on shipboard; -- now called paymaster.
A clerk on steam passenger vessels whose duty it is to keep the accounts of the vessels, such as the receipt of freight, tickets, etc.
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Colloquially, any paymaster or cashier.
Purser's name (Naut.), a false name. [Slang]
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
mid-15c., "treasurer," especially "caretaker of accounts and provisions on a ship," originally also "maker of purses" (late 15c.), agent noun from Middle English purse (see purse (n.)). From late 13c. as a surname.
Wiktionary
n. The person responsible for handling the accounts on a ship, or for dealing with the passengers on a ship or aircraft.
WordNet
n. an officer aboard a ship who keeps accounts and attends to the passengers' welfare
Wikipedia
A ship's purser (also purser or pusser) is the person on a ship responsible for the handling of money on board. On modern merchant ships, the purser is the officer responsible for all administration and supply; frequently the cooks and stewards answer to them as well.
Purser is a surname. Notable persons with that surname include:
- Andrew Purser (born 1958), Australian rules footballer
- Cecil Purser (1862–1953), Australian physician
- David Purser (born 1987), English footballer
- Dorothy Ann Purser (21st century), American screenwriter
- John Purser (born 1942), Scottish composer
- Louis Claude Purser (1854–1932), Irish translator
- Philip Purser (born 1925), British novelist
- Ronald E. Purser (born 1956), American university professor
- Sarah Purser (1848–1943), Irish artist
- Wayne Purser (born 1980), English footballer
A purser is the person on a ship responsible for the handling of money on board.
Purser may also refer to:
- Purser, California, United States
- Purser (surname), a surname
- Purser (Pirate), the pseudonym for the Famous English Pyrat Thomas Walton; hanged 1583.
Usage examples of "purser".
Cummings, the purser, a small, plump, amiable, and infinitely shrewd irishman was, next to Bullen, the most important man on the ship.
One hour having expired since he had come on board, he ordered his boat, and returned to the shore, and we saw no more of him until we arrived at Spithead, when his lordship came on board, accompanied by a person whom we soon discovered was a half pay purser in the navy: a man who, by dint of the grossest flattery and numerous little attentions, had so completely ingratiated himself with his patron, that he had become as necessary an appendage to the travelling equipage, as the portmanteau or the valet-de-chambre.
The surgeon was assisted by Petreckski, their monkish purser, his brown robe well concealing the blood of their wounded.
Melville had thought so at the time, but now here he was, stranded on a distant planet with a mad dwarven marine sergeant, a monkish purser, a beautiful elven surgeon, and a crew of stranded sailors, surrounded by dead aliens.
I did not again see Schnitzel until, with haggard eyes and suspiciously wet hair, he joined the captain, doctor, purser, and myself at breakfast.
As for your greenstuff, my purser has an excellent unofficial man on shore, will rouse you out any quantity in half an hour.
If Purser Linde had a problem with being called Boobs, she concealed it behind a mask of wary silence.
The other pages recorded his trips, his efficiency ratings, and other permanent data, each properly signed by the first officers and pursers concerned.
But the ships you served in are mostly out of commission and none of the pursers happens to be in Earthport now.
Captains and pursers kept shaking their heads, or asking for more money than the sisters could afford.
This task completed, he stood by while the others signed in their various capacities - Irene as Mate, Tallentire as Second Mate, Bronheim as Chief Engineer, Metzenther as Communications Officer, and Susanna as Purser.
I started as a purser on the Brotherhood ships, but traveling got old.
Molesworth, the nervous-looking purser, was waiting by the mizzen, and Bolitho guessed that Cairns was going ashore with him to bolster his dealings with the victuallers, who, like ships' chandlers, thought more of personal profit than patriotism.
I'm the systems engineer on the Cambria, with double duty as purser when we have passengers.
My purser provides everything, and keeps a regular account, which I sign as correct, and send home to government, which defrays the whole expenses, under the head of conciliation money.