Shoemaker

Word SHOEMAKER
Character 9
Hyphenation shoe mak er
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Shoemaker"

What do we mean by shoemaker?

One that makes or repairs shoes. noun

A common name of various species of carangoid fishes, especially of Alectis ciliaris, from its thread-like dorsal spines. noun

A maker of shoes; one who makes or has to do with making shoes and boots. noun

One whose occupation it is to make shoes and boots. noun

The threadfish. noun

The runner, 12. noun

A person who makes shoes noun

The threadfish. noun

A fish, Elagatis pinnulatis, the runner. noun

A person who makes or repairs shoes noun

A person who makes shoes

The threadfish.

A fish, Elagatis pinnulatis, the runner.

Synonyms and Antonyms for Shoemaker

  • Antonyms for shoemaker
  • Shoemaker antonyms not found!

The word "shoemaker" in example sentences

He farmed some, and he was what they called a shoemaker then. ❋ Unknown (1976)

He could be very engaging, and was at his best when enjoying what he called a shoemaker's holiday -- that is, when away from town at some watering-place, with friends. ❋ Percy Hethrington Fitzgerald (1879)

Obviously for most of us a custom tailor or shoemaker is not an option in the US. ❋ Unknown (2005)

I think people miss this - and being able to connect with their shoemaker is a fun experience for most of our customers. ' ❋ Unknown (2009)

I think people miss this - and being able to connect with their shoemaker is a fun experience for most of our customers. ❋ Unknown (2009)

Shares of the Niwot, Colo., shoemaker, which issued guidance after the close of regular trading, plunged 27% to $13 in after-hours trading after Crocs also said it would close its Canadian manufacturing operations to consolidate its production at its lower-cost company-owned and third-party facilities. ❋ Unknown (2008)

The time came when the shoemaker was the only Liberal voter in the place. ❋ Frank Dilnot (N/A)

The shoemaker was the smallest man Faith had ever seen. ❋ Alice Turner Curtis (1912)

No wonder the shoemaker was a melancholy-looking man. ❋ Seumas O'Kelly (1899)

Padna abandoned the impression that the shoemaker was a melancholy man. ❋ Seumas O'Kelly (1899)

The shoemaker was a kind old man, who had known me from a baby, and he contrived to make my work easy for me, -- seeing I took kindly to it, -- and often let me have the afternoon to myself. ❋ Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards (1896)

The druggist sells hats; the shoemaker is the sole bookseller, if that dignity may be allowed him on the strength of the three Welsh Bibles, and the guide to Caernarvon, which adorn his window; ink is sold by the apothecary; the grocer sells ropes, (a commodity which, I fear, I shall require before my residence here is over,) and tooth-brushes. ❋ George Otto Trevelyan (1883)

A shoemaker is a "monsieur in black," who says to a mother on saluting the daughter, "Madame, a charming young person, and I am more sensible than ever of the value of your kindness," on which the young girl, just out of a convent, takes him for a suitor and blushes scarlet. ❋ Hippolyte Taine (1860)

It would be just as reasonable to call the shoemaker a mediator between the production and consumption of leather; or the cloth merchant, who cuts the material from the piece, an assistant preparatory to the tailor. ❋ Wilhelm Roscher (1855)

Little Jacket was curious to see whether the shoemaker was a giant too. ❋ Christopher Pearse Cranch (1852)

The shoemaker was a poor man, and needed his money as soon as earned -- he was not unadvised of this fact. ❋ Unknown (1847)

His opponents were confounded by the strength of his memory and the affability of his deportment, and owned, that it was impossible to contend against a great man who called the shoemaker by his Christian name, who was sure that the butcher's daughter must be growing a fine girl, and who was anxious to know whether the blacksmith's youngest boy was breeched. ❋ Thomas Babington Macaulay Macaulay (1829)

There was at least as much vanity in the sturdy industry as in the strenuous idleness, for our shoemaker is a man of substance; he employs three journeymen, two lame, and one ❋ Mary Russell Mitford (1821)

Gone now are those little towns where the shoemaker was a poet, ❋ Unknown (2009)

The centenary of the Baptist Missionary Society, observed in 1892, recalled to mind the vast work accomplished by missions since that pioneer society sent out the apostolic "shoemaker" Carey, to labour in India, and reminds us of the great change wrought in public opinion since he and his enterprise were so bitterly attacked. ❋ Annie E. Keeling (N/A)

Cross Reference for Shoemaker

What does shoemaker mean?

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