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clothier Meaning in Tamil ( clothier வார்த்தையின் தமிழ் அர்த்தம்)



துணி செய்பவர்

Noun:

Clothier,



clothier's Usage Examples:

After a quick stop at a clothier to pick up a long wool skirt and sweater, she changed in her car and drove home.


In 1337 the industry received an impulse from the settlement of a party of Flemish clothiers, and extended so greatly that when it was found necessary in 1566 to appoint by act of parliament deputies to assist the aulnegers, Bolton is named as one of the places where these deputies were to be employed.


Without factories of workers, clothiers had to make everything by hand.


His paternal grandfather was a rich clothier of Wotton-under-Edge; on his mother's side he was connected with the noble family of the Poyntzes of Acton.


WILLIAM LAUD (1573-1645), English archbishop, only son of William Laud, a clothier, was born at Reading on the 7th of October 1573.


In the middle ages Malmesbury possessed a considerable cloth manufacture, and at the Dissolution the abbey was bought by a rich clothier and fitted with looms for weaving.


In 1963 she moved into Grange House at Warley, a 17th century yeoman clothier's house.


An orange sweatsuit is required (if you have a hard time finding one, try looking at discount clothiers online for some ideas), but beyond that, white and black material are all you'll have to supply.


The two exchanged pleasantries and blatant flirtations as they walked to Chapman's, an upscale men's clothier.


Dragging her feet across the creaking parquet floor around an old clothiers dummy, her mouth full of pins.


JOHN TILLOTSON (1630-1694), English archbishop, was the son of a Puritan clothier in Sowerby, Yorkshire, where he was born in October 1630.


Tiverton was an important centre of the woollen trade in the 16th century, and Risdon, writing in 1608, describes it as thronged with rich clothiers, and the Monday market famous for its kersies, known as "Tiverton kersies," while as late as the reign of George II.


political economist, born on the 26th of May 1623, was the son of a clothier at Romsey in Hampshire, and received his early education at the grammar school there.





Synonyms:

merchant, merchandiser, haberdasher,



Antonyms:

None

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