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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
signalman
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A signalman passed by, motioning with his green flag.
▪ A factor in this was excessive overtime with many signalmen working 7 days a week for a month.
▪ After his demobilisation from the Navy he was accepted by the railway authorities to train as a signalman.
▪ All the same, signalmen can be a fund of unexpected tales and it is always interesting to hear their stories.
▪ Never again would a signalman give the signal that all was clear.
▪ The signalman in his isolated box tells the narrator of an apparition he has now seen three times.
▪ The conditions under which signalmen had to work can only be imagined.
▪ The narrator, returning to the box shortly afterwards, finds that the signalman has been run over by a train.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Signalman

Signalman \Sig"nal*man\, n.; pl. -men. A man whose business is to manage or display signals; especially, one employed in setting the signals by which railroad trains are run or warned.

Wiktionary
signalman

n. 1 Somebody employed to operate the signals and points of a railway. 2 A member of the armed forces responsible for signalling.

WordNet
signalman

n. a railroad employee in charge of signals and point in a railroad yard

Wikipedia
Signalman

A signalman is a person who historically made signals using flags and light. In modern times, the role of signalmen has evolved and now usually uses electronic communication equipment. Signalmen usually work in rail transport networks, armed forces, or construction (to direct heavy equipment such as cranes). Many armed forces now use the rank of signaller instead.

Signalman (comics)

Signalman is a fictional supervillain published by DC Comics.

Signalman (rank)

Signalman was a U.S. Navy rating for sailors that specialized in visual communication. See Signaller for more about the roles of Signalmen.

Signalman (rail)

A signalman or signaller is an employee of a railway transport network who operates the points and signals from a signal box in order to control the movement of trains.

Signalman (disambiguation)
  • Signalman, a person who historically gave signals using flags and light.
  • Signalman (rank), the military rank
  • Signalman (rail), a railwayman who operates the points and signals in a railway signal box
  • The Signal-Man, a short story by Charles Dickens
  • Signalman (comics), a villain in the Batman comics
  • A ranger-like ally in Gekisou Sentai Carranger
  • Signal person or signalperson, a construction job in which one directs heavy equipment such as cranes using hand signals and/or voice commands

Usage examples of "signalman".

He snapped orders to his signalman, who translated them into bugle calls.

Beside him was a signalman waiting to haul down the Jack once contact with the land had been cut.

One signalman and a messenger who had been carrying a fanny of cocoa to the bridge had died.

Only Parvin, the leading signalman, who had been in the ship when Wingate had first joined her, understood and felt something like pity for him.

Keyes ran to him, his eyes brimming with tears, blind even to the grotesque thing with the unlit cigarette in its mouth, or Hillier face-down on the deck across a bloodied signalman, of Tucker sitting with his back against the flag-locker, his hands interlaced across his stomach and the crimson mess which seemed to defy his fingers in its efforts to reach the deck.

The signalman cursed as a spent bullet clanged against the bridge and whimpered plaintively over the other side.

Tell Ordinary Signalman Murray to find some cups and fetch the bridge party something hot.

The signalman did not bother to look up, but spread out the uppermost flag.

As he walked down the ladder a signalman held out a stained battle ensign.

And he cried it in a terrible voice, for he knew that if a signalman sleeps on duty, he risks losing his situation, let alone all the other dreadful risks to trains which expect him to tell them when it is safe for them to go their ways.

When the signalman on the south rim sharply struck the ground with his flag, Keselo stopped.

Then he went back to the tree-snag and moved east until the signalman on the other side told him to stop.

Hook-Beak led his men along the narrow creek-bed Longbow and his archers were following to reach the position the signalman across the ravine had chosen for them.

When the men were concentrated in war carts, there was always a signalman handy in every sixth cart, so there was no point wasting a Big Person on one.

He glanced at the gangway petty officer, Engstrand, a tall broad-shouldered first-class signalman, who was leaning against the desk, enjoying the byplay with a toothy grin.