wheelcraft
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]wheelcraft (uncountable)
- The art or skill of making and repairing wheels, or of riding on wheels.
- 1876, William W. Fowler, Women on the American Frontier, page 155:
- The vehicles which they provided on such occasions for land carriage were curiosities of wheelcraft—I speak of the Jersey wagons. The old-fashioned Jersey wagon has, years ago, given place to more showy and flexible vehicles […]
- 1900, Frank R. Stockton, A Bicycle of Cathay:
- "How did you happen to fall?" I asked — not that I needed to inquire, for my own knowledge of wheelcraft assured me that she had tumbled simply because she did not know how to ride.
- 1935, Municipal Journal (volume 44, part 4, page 2036)
- Perhaps the Darlaston company's spoked disc wheel is the one item which invites particular attention first, for it certainly represents good wheelcraft where strength without clumsiness is desired.
- 1986, Arvind N. Das, The Longue Duree, page 24:
- […] some households acquired bullock-carts which required a better breed of bullocks than were locally available, better wheelcraft than the village blacksmith-cum-carpenter could provide, iron rims for the wheels, and so on […]