craft
- [N-COUNT] You can refer to a boat, a spacecraft, or an aircraft as a craft: With great difficulty, the fisherman manoeuvred his small craft close to the reef.
- [N-COUNT] A craft is an activity such as weaving, carving, or pottery that involves making things skilfully with your hands:
.. All kinds of traditional craft industries are preserved here. - [N-COUNT] You can use craft to refer to any activity or job that involves doing something skilfully:
.. Maurice Murphy, one of the country's leading classical trumpeters, learnt his craft with the Black Dyke Mills band. - [VERB] If something is crafted, it is made skilfully:
.. The windows would probably have been crafted in the latter part of the Middle Ages.
.. Many delegates were willing to craft a compromise.
.. The author extracts the maximum from every carefully-crafted scene in this witty tale.
.. original, hand-crafted bags at affordable prices.
.... Collins Cobuild
craft: noun only
- Skill in doing or making something, as in the arts; proficiency. See Synonyms at art1.
- Skill in evasion or deception; guile.
- (a). An occupation or trade requiring manual dexterity or skilled artistry.
(b). The membership of such an occupation or trade; guild. - pl. craft A boat, ship, or aircraft.
... Am Heritage
Usage Note: craft as a verb
Craft has been used as a verb since the Old English period and was used in Middle English to refer specifically to the artful construction of a text or discourse.
- In recent years, crafted, the past participle of craft, has enjoyed a vogue as a participle referring to well-wrought writing.
- Craft is more acceptable when applied to literary works than to other sorts of writing,
- and more acceptable as a participle than as a verb.
... Am Heritage
Thesaurus Roget II: craft
- Natural or acquired facility in a specific activity: ability, adeptness, art, command, expertise, expertness, knack, mastery, proficiency, skill, technique. (Informal) know-how. See ability/inability, knowledge/ignorance.
- Deceitful cleverness: art, artfulness, artifice, craftiness, cunning, foxiness, guile, slyness, wiliness. See honest/dishonest, means.
- Lack of straightforwardness and honesty in action: chicanery, craftiness, deviousness, dishonesty, indirection, shadiness, shiftiness, slyness, sneakiness, trickery, trickiness, underhandedness. See honest/dishonest.
- Activity pursued as a livelihood: art, business, calling, career, employment, job, line, métier, occupation, profession, pursuit, trade, vocation, work. Slang racket. Archaic employ. See action/inaction.
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