craftswomanship
Pronunciation
This text is extracted from the Wiktionary and it is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license | Terms and conditions | Privacy policy 0.002
Pronunciation
- (British) IPA: /ˈkɹæftswʊmʌnʃɪp/
craftswomanship (uncountable)
- The body of skills, techniques, and expertise of (a) feminine craft(s).
- 1934: Joseph Kirk Folsom, The Family: Its Sociology and Social Psychiatry, p296 ↗ (J. Wiley & Sons, Inc.)
- …were to cease purchasing machinery, labor-saving devices, hired service, ready-made food and clothes, and go back to the old-fashioned craftswomanship.
- 1991 Duke L.J. 365 (Duke Law Journal); quoted in:
- 2000: Richard Delgado & Jean Stefancic, Critical Race Theory: The Cutting Edge, [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Hd1MpNYWAaoC&pg=PA275&dq=craftswomanship&lr=&ei=Qn-0SK7KHImUzATMhIX2Bg&sig=ACfU3U1Sq-dkuogJL34WitI-aSg5B5vQZA#PPA275,M1 page 275] (Temple University Press ↗)
- When will I cherish my hair again, the way my grandmother cherished it, when fascinated by its beauty, with hands carrying centuries-old secrets of adornment and craftswomanship, she plaited it, twisted it, cornrowed it, finger-curled it, olive-oiled it, on the growing moon cut and shaped it, and wove it like fine strands of gold inlaid with semiprecious stones, coral and ivory, telling with my hair a lost-found story of the people she carried inside her?
- 2006: Alison Findlay, Playing Spaces in Early Women’s Drama, p200 ↗ (Cambridge University Press ↗)
- Its swift intercutting suggests theatrical craftswomanship based on a working knowledge of the effects that could be achieved with shutters and scenery offered by the Theatre Royal.
- 1934: Joseph Kirk Folsom, The Family: Its Sociology and Social Psychiatry, p296 ↗ (J. Wiley & Sons, Inc.)
This text is extracted from the Wiktionary and it is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license | Terms and conditions | Privacy policy 0.002