(n.) One who makes or stamps coin; a maker of money; -- usually, a maker of counterfeit money.
(n.) An inventor or maker, as of words.
Example Sentences:
(1) It was signed off: (Mrs) Margaret Cockcroft aged 96 A childhood word coined in the 1930s and remembered in old age in 2015: a word that summoned back to its coiner – and to me – a moment in time and place.
(2) Towards the end of his life, hailed as coiner of phrases such as the "information economy" and "post-industrialism", Bell continued to lay claim on an eroded 1950s-style political liberalism staggering under blows from the Republican right.
Joiner
Definition:
(n.) One who, or that which, joins.
(n.) One whose occupation is to construct articles by joining pieces of wood; a mechanic who does the woodwork (as doors, stairs, etc.) necessary for the finishing of buildings.
(n.) A wood-working machine, for sawing, plaining, mortising, tenoning, grooving, etc.
Example Sentences:
(1) Odds-ratios associated with cabinetmakers (OR = 11.2, 95% CI = 2.7-45.9)) and carpenters and joiners (OR = 5.8, 95% CI = 1.8-18.6) were also significantly elevated for the other-histologic-types category.
(2) You need spaces where people don’t have to worry about who they kiss or how they look.” The Joiners Lives On swiftly secured asset of community value status for the pub – a local council designation that makes it harder to change a venue’s use and means it can’t be sold without giving the group the chance to bid for it themselves.
(3) This may reflect self-selection by well-to-do older people who are "joiners" or a lack of truly involving group roles.
(4) They included 326 joiner families (1,101 persons) and 145 nonjoiner families (483 persons).
(5) The model fits well down to X-ray doses per fraction of approximately 1 Gy, but lower X-ray doses were more effective per gray than predicted by LQ, as seen previously in skin [M. C. Joiner et al., Int.
(6) Nonjoiners and, to a lesser extent, joiners viewed those attending groups as less self-sufficient (e.g., need help, lonely), suggesting a mildly stigmatizing image of BSGs.
(7) Awareness of the plans is relatively high among joiners and nonjoiners, as is awareness of the relative price and benefits of these competing options.
(8) Owing to a car accident, the clothes of a injured joiner were permeated with a timber impregnating product containing 51.8% of mineral spirit (a mixture of naphthenes, aromatic and aliphatic hydrocarbons).
(9) This paper deals with a case of occupational asthma due to palisander wood dust (Dalbergia nigra) in a joiner who sanded and polished parts of musical instruments.
(10) By the early 70s he was making his first "joiners" – large assemblages of photographs that produced an almost cubist effect – in response to his dissatisfaction with the distortion of wide-angle lenses and was quickly aware of the possibilities of office-quality photocopiers and the fax machine.
(11) The idea was not only to save the Joiners but to create an inclusive community centre,” says Clendon.
(12) The latent period of several decades for the development of silicosis is such that it may well be feared that the cases now reported are only the beginning of increased occurrence of the disease in coming years among particularly exposed concrete workers, bricklayers, unskilled workers, electricians, joiners and carpenters.
(13) Non-joiners reported higher preprogram smoking levels and more friends and children who smoked.
(14) The injury was caused by the sharp end of joiner file.
(15) You could go on your own and talk to people you wouldn’t meet otherwise.” The Joiners became an east London landmark, known for wild nights and good turns, such as helping fund treatment for asylum seekers with HIV.
(16) Univariate analyses showed that a history of chronic sinusitis (relative risk, RR = 3.2), nasal polyps (RR = 5.0), an occupational history of being a carpenter, joiner, furniture worker, or other woodworker (RR = 2.9), and current or past smoking habits (RR = 3.0) were statistically significant risk factors for men.
(17) They might be LGBTQ pubs such as the Black Cap in Camden or the Joiners Arms in Shoreditch, both also closed, though a version of the latter has now reopened in Sitges, Spain.
(18) However, the joiners were younger, had lived in Rochester for a shorter period, and had made less use of physicians in private practice.
(19) The non-joiners have argued that the focus should shift from the 1997 Kyoto protocol to forging a new global agreement covering developed and developing countries, that would be drafted by 2015 and come into force in 2020.
(20) You can be a cook, a cleaner, a friend, a playmate, you can be an ear, you can be a bloody joiner, a decorator.” A couple of months back, a dyslexic boy read in class the words “I, Me, Mine”.