handcraft

English

Etymology

From Middle English handcrafte, handecraft, hond-craft, from Old English handcræft, equivalent to hand + craft. Cognate with Dutch handkracht, German Handkraft.

Noun

handcraft (plural handcrafts)

  1. handicraft
  2. (obsolete) The class of subjects for study that rely upon experimentation and observation.
    • 1895, National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges, Proceedings of the Annual Convention - Issues 8-12, page 78:
      These are, in redecraft, the English language and literature, mathematics, psychology; in handcraft, the physical sciences, physics, chemistry, biology; with regular and ample laboratory work in each.
    • 1897, Daniel Coit Gilman, A Study in Black and White, page 8:
      Accordingly, that institution or school is best which enforces habits of order, attention, obedience, discrimination, memory ; which then secures skill in handcraft and redecraft, and likewise shows how these habits and this skill may be applied in useful avocations.

Translations

Verb

handcraft (third-person singular simple present handcrafts, present participle handcrafting, simple past and past participle handcrafted)

  1. To engage in handcraft or handicraft.

Translations

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.