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Carpenter vs Housewright - What's the difference?

carpenter | housewright |

As nouns the difference between carpenter and housewright

is that carpenter is a person skilled at carpentry, the trade of cutting and joining timber in order to construct buildings or other structures while housewright is a person who builds and repairs houses, especially wooden houses. Particularly, in eighteenth-century colonial America, a craftsman who cut timber (like a lumberjack) in the quantity required for the construction of a house, then sawed it into planks, and finally jointed and assembled them (like a carpenter).

As a proper noun Carpenter

is {{surname|A=An occupational|from=occupations}} derived from the trade name carpenter.

carpenter

Noun

(en noun)
  • A person skilled at carpentry, the trade of cutting and joining timber in order to construct buildings or other structures.
  • (nautical) A senior rating in ships responsible for all the woodwork onboard; in the days of sail, a warrant officer responsible for the hull, masts, spars and boats of a ship, and whose responsibility was to sound the well to see if the ship was making water.
  • A two-wheeled carriage
  • Synonyms

    * joiner * chippy

    housewright

    English

    Noun

  • A person who builds]] and repairs houses, especially wooden houses. Particularly, in eighteenth-century colonial America, a craftsman who cut timber (like a lumberjack) in the quantity required for the construction of a house, then sawed it into planks, and finally [[joint#Verb, jointed and assembled them (like a carpenter).
  • * 1828, Charles Caldwell, A discourse on the genius and character of the Rev. Horace Holley, LL. D.: late president of Transylvania University , Hilliard, Gray, Little, and Wilkins, pages 208-209.
  • The north and west corners are indeed sometimes penetrated by the rain and require a little attention from the housewright to remedy the evil.
  • * 1902, Virginia Robie, Colonial furniture , in The House Beautiful (An Illustrated Magazine of Household Art), October 1902 (vol. 12, number 5), Herbert S. Stone, page 270
  • The names of the colonial craftsmen had changed. The joiner and the turner and the housewright had become the cabinet-maker, the chair-maker, and the carpenter.
  • * 1914, Alfred Johnson, History and genealogy of one line of descent from Captain Edward Johnson: together with his English ancestry, 1500-1914 , Stanhope Press (F.H. Gilson Company), page 63
  • John Johnson resided in Woburn, Mass., and was by occupation a housewright or carpenter and owned a saw-mill in Woburn.

    References

    * 1852, A Literary Association, A hand-book of Anglo-Saxon orthography , John A. Gray, pages 75 and 80. * 1913, Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G & C. Merriam Co., page 710

    See also

    * carpenter * wright