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Definition of Craftsmanship
1. Noun. Skill in an occupation or trade.
Generic synonyms: Accomplishment, Acquirement, Acquisition, Attainment, Skill
Specialized synonyms: Housecraft, Priestcraft, Stagecraft, Tradecraft, Watercraft, Woodcraft
Derivative terms: Craft, Craftsman, Craftsman, Craftsman, Workman
Definition of Craftsmanship
1. n. The work of a craftsman.
Definition of Craftsmanship
1. Noun. The quality of being a craftsman. ¹
2. Noun. An example of a craftsman's work. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Craftsmanship
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Craftsmanship
Literary usage of Craftsmanship
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The State and the Nation by Edward Jenks (1919)
"CHAPTER VIII COMMERCE AND craftsmanship IT is very difficult to discover whether
commerce or craftsmanship comes first in the order of social evolution. ..."
2. The Bookman (1910)
"N the present series of articles on "The craftsmanship of Writing," the best ...
The aim of "The craftsmanship of Writing" is nothing more pretentious than ..."
3. Studies in Seven Arts by Arthur Symons (1907)
"THE DECAY OF craftsmanship IN ENGLAND IN the year 1903 I went several times to
the seventh exhibition of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society, ..."
4. Seen on the Stage by Clayton Meeker Hamilton (1920)
"VII THE PERMANENCE OF craftsmanship Henry Bernstein Whatever is worth doing at
all is worth doing well: and this is the only answer that is necessary to ..."
5. Personnel Relations in Industry by Algie Martin Simons (1921)
"Today, as invention declines, craftsmanship disappears, and national industry is
... Destruction of craftsmanship Dean Herman Schneider of the University of ..."
6. Vocations for Girls by Eli Witwer Weaver (1913)
"Positions in craftsmanship and the practical arts are found everywhere: in the
civil service, in industries, in mercantile establishments, in newspaper ..."
7. Chats on Cottage and Farmhouse Furniture by Arthur Hayden (1912)
"... and ash used in lieu of mahogany and satinwood— Village craftsmanship not
debased by early Victorian art—Its obliteration in the age of factory-made ..."