Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at blacksmith's.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Blacksmith's.
Examples
-
Tony Jones, landlord of The Blacksmith's Arms, the sole pub in the tiny Lincolnshire community of Skendleby, has converted part of the premises into a general store.
Hoist One Last Glass 2008
-
There is a Furnishing Guild, a Clothiers Guild, and an Agricultural Guild already in existence; while news reaches us of a Dairy Guild, a Blacksmith's and Farrier's Guild, a Fruit Grower's Guild, a Packing Case Guild and a Commercial Vehicle Maker's Guild that are in process of formation.
-
Written at the height of the Cold War as a message of friends and solidarity from the Blacksmith's Trade Union in Leith in
Gillie Mor 1997
-
"James and I were having a drink over at the Blacksmith's Arms and we thought we'd just check on your heifer."
Every living thing Herriot, James 1992
-
In the Blacksmith's Arms my partner took a thoughtful pull at his glass.
Every living thing Herriot, James 1992
-
Figure 13 Blacksmith's anvil 1 anvil with slip-on striking base, 2 double face sledge, 3 flanging and hardy iron
2. Selected Tools, Appliances and Machines B. Zierenberg 1990
-
"Blacksmith's nothing compared to the muscles we get poling the river."
Prentice Alvin Card, Orson Scott 1989
-
Attachment 13-B, "How to Build a Blacksmith's Blower"
Chapter 10 1982
-
On Longfellow's seventy-second birthday the children of Cambridge presented him with a chair made from the wood of the "Village Blacksmith's" chestnut tree.
Elson Grammar School Literature v4 William H. Elson
-
I remember within these walls seeing two gentlemen who evidently, from their remarks, were very good judges of horses, looking with the greatest admiration upon the well-known picture of Landseer, "The Horseshoeing at the Blacksmith's;" and after they had looked at it for some time one was approaching nearer, when the other in an agony of enthusiasm said: "For heaven's sake, don't go too near, he will kick you."
Modern Eloquence: Vol III, After-Dinner Speeches P-Z Various
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.