Definition of Ironmongeries

1. Noun. (plural of ironmongery) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Ironmongeries

1. ironmongery [n] - See also: ironmongery

Lexicographical Neighbors of Ironmongeries

ironizes
ironizing
ironlike
ironmaker
ironmakers
ironmaking
ironman
ironmans
ironmaster
ironmasters
ironmen
ironmine
ironmines
ironmonger
ironmongeress
ironmongeries (current term)
ironmongering
ironmongers
ironmongery
ironness
ironnesses
irons
irons in the fire
ironshod
ironshot
ironside
ironsmith
ironsmithing
ironsmiths
ironstone

Literary usage of Ironmongeries

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

1. The Revolutionary Movement of 1848-9 in Italy, Austria-Hungary, and Germany by Charles Edmund Maurice (1887)
"Pavia had been deprived of its arsenal; Brescia had been compelled to close its armourers' shops, Bergamo its ironmongeries; Cremona had lost one trade, ..."

2. The Economic Development of the Argentine Republic in the Last Fifty Years by Ernesto Tornquist & Co (1919)
"... ironmongeries, tinsmiths and painters; timber in bulk and shaped; sand, lime, cement, bricks, marble, glass and crystal; iron and steel, ..."

3. The Great White Tribe in Filipinia by Paul Thomas Gilbert (1903)
"ironmongeries, though primitive in their equipment, have produced, by dint of skill and patience, work that is very passable. The women weave their own ..."

4. Fields, Factories and Workshops: Or, Industry Combined with Agriculture and by Petr Alekseevich Kropotkin (1913)
"The various ironmongeries connected with horse-clothing — bits, spurs, bridles, and so on—are also largely made by hand at Walsall. ..."

5. Fields, Factories and Workshops: Or Industry Combined with Agriculture and by Petr Alekseevich Kropotkin (1901)
"The various ironmongeries connected with horse-clothing—bits, spurs, bridles, and so on—are also largely made by hand at Walsall. ..."

6. A Handbook of the Industries of the British Isles and the United States by G. Phillips Bevan (1882)
"Walsall, it should be stated, is also the principal centre of a very large trade in bits, spurs, bridles, and saddles, and the numerous ironmongeries that ..."

7. The Revolutionary Movement of 1848-9 in Italy, Austria-Hungary, and Germany by Charles Edmund Maurice (1887)
"Pavia had been deprived of its arsenal; Brescia had been compelled to close its armourers' shops, Bergamo its ironmongeries; Cremona had lost one trade, ..."

8. The Economic Development of the Argentine Republic in the Last Fifty Years by Ernesto Tornquist & Co (1919)
"... ironmongeries, tinsmiths and painters; timber in bulk and shaped; sand, lime, cement, bricks, marble, glass and crystal; iron and steel, ..."

9. The Great White Tribe in Filipinia by Paul Thomas Gilbert (1903)
"ironmongeries, though primitive in their equipment, have produced, by dint of skill and patience, work that is very passable. The women weave their own ..."

10. Fields, Factories and Workshops: Or, Industry Combined with Agriculture and by Petr Alekseevich Kropotkin (1913)
"The various ironmongeries connected with horse-clothing — bits, spurs, bridles, and so on—are also largely made by hand at Walsall. ..."

11. Fields, Factories and Workshops: Or Industry Combined with Agriculture and by Petr Alekseevich Kropotkin (1901)
"The various ironmongeries connected with horse-clothing—bits, spurs, bridles, and so on—are also largely made by hand at Walsall. ..."

12. A Handbook of the Industries of the British Isles and the United States by G. Phillips Bevan (1882)
"Walsall, it should be stated, is also the principal centre of a very large trade in bits, spurs, bridles, and saddles, and the numerous ironmongeries that ..."

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