Stari zanatlija, nekad veoma važan, zanatlija koji kuje metal.
Artisan who works with iron by forging and welding. Until automobiles and tractors replaced horses and carts, the blacksmith was a vital member of the rural community.
Apart from shoeing horses (farriery), a blacksmith's work included the maintenance of wagons, carriages, and farm equipment, and the manufacture of articles for domestic and agricultural use. Modern blacksmiths benefit from the popularity of horse riding, and have also turned to making decorative objects in wrought iron.
A smith who forges and shapes iron with a hammer and anvil.
ETYM Old Eng. farrour, ferrer, Old Fren. ferreor, ferrier, Late Lat. Ferrator, ferrarius equorum, from ferrare to shoe a horse, ferrum a horseshoe, from Latin ferrum iron. Related to Ferreous.
A person who shoes horses; SYN. horseshoer.
One who shoes horses or cares for horses.
Horse-shoeing smith.
1. Someone who makes copies illegally; SYN. counterfeiter.
2. Someone who operates a forge.
ETYM as. smith; akin to Dutch smid, German schmied, Old High Germ. smid, Icel. smithr, Dan. and Swed. smed, Goth. smitha (in comp.); cf. Greek smile a sort of knife, sminye a hoe, mattock.
1. Someone who works at something specified.
2. Someone who works metal (especially by hammering it when it is hot and malleable); SYN. metalworker.