Definition of Dyers

1. Noun. (plural of dyer) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Dyers

1. dyer [n] - See also: dyer

Lexicographical Neighbors of Dyers

dyeing
dyeings
dyeless
dyelike
dyeline
dyelines
dyer
dyer's-broom
dyer's greenweed
dyer's mignonette
dyer's rocket
dyer's weed
dyer's woad
dyer's woodruff
dyeries
dyers (current term)
dyers' chamomile
dyery
dyes
dyester
dyesters
dyestuff
dyestuffs
dyeth
dyeweed
dyeweeds
dyewood
dyewoods
dygogram
dygograms

Literary usage of Dyers

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1780)
"A Hint to the dyers and Cloth-malers. And well worth the Nonce of the Merchant. ... that may be of ufe to the dyers ; and a very ..."

2. British Industries: A Series of General Reviews for Business Men and Students by William James Ashley (1907)
"The British Cotton and Wool dyers' Association followed. This association has a capital of £3 millions, and includes forty-five firms, ie the majority of ..."

3. The Occupational Diseases: Their Causation, Symptoms, Treatment and Prevention by William Gilman Thompson (1914)
"dyers dyers make use of a great variety of toxic substances as coloring, ... As an example of some of the hazards of dyers, dermatitis caused by potassium ..."

4. Transactions of the Society, Instituted at London, for the Encouragement of by Society of Arts (Great Britain, Royal Society of Arts (Great Britain) (1827)
"SODA LEY FOR dyers. The Sum of FIVE GUINEAS was this Session given to Mr, C. CAMERON, of Glasgow, 'for his mode of PREPARING SODA LEY for the use of dyers ..."

5. Applied Chemistry by Edward Andrew Parnell (1844)
"One of the Florentine dyers having ascertained, in the Levant, a method of extracting a coloring matter from the lichens which furnish archil, ..."

6. Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society by Middlesex Local History Council (1881)
"The dyers' Company have a long list of such pensioners, and it is not too much to say that there is not a single poor person who can claim relationship to ..."

7. The Little Red Book of Bristol by Bristol (England). (1900)
"MADE TO THE dyers OF BRISTOL OF DIVERS ORDINANCES FOR THE CRAFT OF dyers, ETC. Henry, by the grace of God, King of England and France, and Lord of Ireland, ..."

8. The Treasury of Botany: A Popular Dictionary of the Vegetable Kingdom; with by John Lindley (1866)
"One species, H. tinctoria •л native of dry hilly woods from Canada to Carolina, has been used as indigo by dyers, and from this the name (from the Greek ..."

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