woadster
Appearance
See also: Woadster
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English wodester, equivalent to woad (“to dye with woad”) + -ster.
Noun
[edit]woadster (plural woadsters)
- (rare, historical) One who dyes with woad
- 1979, Corliss Lamont, John Mansfield, Letters to Florence Lamont, page 170:
- If you come across a man called Wadster you can be fairly sure that his ancestors were woadsters and dealt in blue dye.
- 2014, original letter: 1877, William Morris, Norman Kelvin, The Collected Letters of William Morris, volume 1, page 395:
- As to the blue-dyeing, I think it would be certainly a very good think to get a woadster over; though you know the old books all say that the woad vat is not good for silk: I don't know why, unless perhaps that the lime is bad for it: still he might help us in setting a potash vat (Cuve-d-Inde).