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Definition of Ironer
1. n. One who, or that which, irons.
Definition of Ironer
1. Noun. Someone who irons, someone who does ironing. ¹
2. Noun. A mangle, a device used to iron clothes. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Ironer
1. a machine for pressing clothes [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Ironer
Literary usage of Ironer
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Modern Factory: Safety, Sanitation and Welfare by George Moses Price (1914)
"Collar and Cuff ironer Guarded. Shows guarding of gearing and protective bar in
front of the feed rolls. accidents to workers operating them are not very ..."
2. The Modern hospital by John Allan Hornsby (1913)
"Another type of ironer is the chest type, where as many chests can be bought ...
No ironer should be purchased which does not have automatic safety devices ..."
3. Report of the Richmond, Indiana, Survey for Vocational Education by Indiana State Board of Education, Richmond (Ind.). Board of Education, Indiana University, Robert Josselyn Leonard (1916)
"The Machine ironer: Bosom Press What the worker does.—The operator adjusts the
shirt bosom on a pad, which is similar in shape and size to the ordinary ..."
4. Women and the Trades by Elizabeth Beardsley Butler (1909)
"The rolls of a sleeve ironer are not more than six to twelve inches long, but in
a body ironer the rolls are twenty-two to thirty-four inches in length, ..."
5. Lawyers' Reports Annotated by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (1906)
"The shirt-bosom ironer by which plaintiff was injured differs in construction
and operation from any of the ironing machines that have been described, ..."
6. The Modern Factory: Safety, Sanitation and Welfare by George Moses Price (1914)
"Collar and Cuff ironer Guarded. Shows guarding of gearing and protective bar in
front of the feed rolls. accidents to workers operating them are not very ..."
7. The Modern hospital by John Allan Hornsby (1913)
"Another type of ironer is the chest type, where as many chests can be bought ...
No ironer should be purchased which does not have automatic safety devices ..."
8. Report of the Richmond, Indiana, Survey for Vocational Education by Indiana State Board of Education, Richmond (Ind.). Board of Education, Indiana University, Robert Josselyn Leonard (1916)
"The Machine ironer: Bosom Press What the worker does.—The operator adjusts the
shirt bosom on a pad, which is similar in shape and size to the ordinary ..."
9. Women and the Trades by Elizabeth Beardsley Butler (1909)
"The rolls of a sleeve ironer are not more than six to twelve inches long, but in
a body ironer the rolls are twenty-two to thirty-four inches in length, ..."
10. Lawyers' Reports Annotated by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (1906)
"The shirt-bosom ironer by which plaintiff was injured differs in construction
and operation from any of the ironing machines that have been described, ..."