¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Draughtsmen
1. draughtsman [n] - See also: draughtsman
Lexicographical Neighbors of Draughtsmen
Literary usage of Draughtsmen
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Ivories by Alfred Maskell (1905)
"Early draughtsmen in ivory and bone of the eleventh and twelfth centuries ...
Anglo-Saxon draughtsmen are often simply ornamented with lines in concentric ..."
2. The History of Modern Painting by RICHARD. MUTHER (1907)
"... well-proportioned leg, and the coquettish- ness of a new coiffure with the
most familiar connoisseurship. He has been called the Balzac of draughtsmen. ..."
3. Publishers Weekly by Publishers' Board of Trade (U.S.), Book Trade Association of Philadelphia, American Book Trade Union, Am. Book Trade Association, R.R. Bowker Company (1877)
"ONE of the newest and most useful instruments for draughtsmen, artists, and others
who use thumb-tacks, is a thumb-tack extractor, impressor, ..."
4. Some Facts Concerning the People, Industries and Schools of Hammond and a by Robert Josselyn Leonard (1915)
"draughtsmen draughtsmen 13 Males Blue Printers . ... draughtsmen, however, are
employed in designing details for roof construction, involving the use of ..."
5. Catholicon Anglicum: An English-Latin Wordbook, Dated 1483 by Sidney John Hervon Herrtage (1882)
"3 Men used at the game of Tables, draughtsmen. See the quotation from the Will
of Joan Stevens in note to a paire of ..."
6. The Analyst: A Quarterly Journal of Science, Literature, Natural History by William Holl, Neville Wood, Edward Mammatt (1837)
"... of it err in the too great bulkiness of the body ; for, although a thick bird,
it is not so dumpy as ornithological draughtsmen would have us believe. ..."
7. Æsthetics by Eugène Véron (1879)
"Drawing—Irregularities caused ly movement—draughtsmen of line, and draughtsmen
of movement—Physiological demonstration of the superiority of the latter. ..."