| carpenter | An artificer who works in timber; a framer and builder of houses, ships, etc | en |
| carpenter | "the art of telling some one else in words exactly what you mean to say" (Exercises in Rhetoric and English Composition, 1) | en |
| carpenter | a woodworker who makes or repairs wooden objects work as a carpenter | en |
| carpenter | A person skilled at carpentry | en |
| carpenter | a senior rating in ships responsible for all the woodwork onboard; in the days of sail, a warrant officer responsible for the hull, masts, spars and boats of a ship, and whose responsibility was to sound the well to see if the ship was making water | en |
| carpenter | woodworker, one who makes things out of wood isim | en |
| carpenter | n tukang kayu (kayu) | en |
| carpenter | a woodworker who makes or repairs wooden objects | en |
| carpenter | A carpenter is a person whose job is making and repairing wooden things | en |
| carpenter | n workman who builds and repairs wooden things, esp the wooden parts of buildings, ships, etc | en |
| carpenter | work as a carpenter | en |
| carpenter | is from the Low Latin carpentarius, a maker of carpenta (two-wheeled carts and carriages) The carpentum was used for ladies; the carpentum funebre or carpentum pompaticum was a hearse There was also a carpentum (cart) for agricultural purposes There is no Latin word for our carpenter; the phrase faber lignarius is used by Cicero Our forefathers called a carpenter a smith or a wood-smith (French, charpentér ) | en |
| carpenter | A worker who build or repairs wooden structures or their structural parts In addition to other work on the East Span project, carpenters build frames for concrete work and other structures | en |
| carpentering | The occupation or work of a carpenter; the act of working in timber; carpentry | en |
| carpenters | plural of carpenter | en |