different between workman vs fabrile
workman
English
Etymology
From Middle English werkman, from Old English weorcmann (“workman”), equivalent to work +? -man. Compare Dutch werkman (“workman”), German Werkmann (“labourer, workman”), Icelandic verkamaður (“workman”).
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /?w?km?n/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?w??km?n/
- Hyphenation: work?man
Noun
workman (plural workmen)
- A man who labours for wages.
- An artisan or craftsman.
Derived terms
- a bad workman always blames his tools
Related terms
- worker
- workwoman
Translations
workman From the web:
- what workmanship means
- what workmans comp pays for
- what's workmans comp
- workmen's compensation
- what workman means
- workmanlike what does it mean
- workman what is the definition
- what does workers comp cover
fabrile
English
Etymology
From Latin fabrilis, from faber (“workman”). See forge.
Adjective
fabrile (not comparable)
- Pertaining to a workman, or to work done in stone, metal, wood, etc.
- fabrile skill
Anagrams
- firable, friable, lifebar
fabrile From the web:
- what febrile means
- what febrile seizure looks like
- what febrile convulsion
- what's febrile seizures
- what's febrile illness
- what's febrile response
- what's febrile state
- what does febrile mean
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- workman vs fabrile
- workman vs workmanly
- workman vs underworker
- workman vs workwoman
- workman vs ratten
- coworker vs relative
- coworker vs worker
- coworker vs confrere
- employer vs coworker
- employee vs coworker
- coworker vs manager
- coworker vs supervisors
- coworker vs peers
- teammates vs coworker
- coworker vs collague
- superabundance vs rankness
- excess vs rankness
- profusion vs rankness
- richness vs rankness
- rankness vs wantonness