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[ UK /bˈʊkmən/ ]
[ US /ˈbʊkmən/ ]
NOUN
  1. a learned person (especially in the humanities); someone who by long study has gained mastery in one or more disciplines

How To Use bookman In A Sentence

  • My bookman is a fab cook and makes a mean cup of coffee and I can knit you warm woolly socks. Book Browsing « So Many Books
  • My father was an antiquarian bookman who passed on his passion for rare books to me during my childhood.
  • Mahomedans, and have attained to a remarkable degree of civilization, under the influence of a law that no 'bookman' Wilson Armistead, 1819?-1868. A Tribute for the Negro: Being a Vindication of the Moral, Intellectual, and Religious Capabilities of the Colored Portion of Mankind; with Particular Reference to the African Race.
  • Lamina propria mononuclear cells were isolated by a modification of the original technique of Bull and Bookman.
  • Visible at that time, contend for effect bookman , furniture of snap up fine wood also is one of vogue.
  • Early nineteenth-century phenomena such as bibliomania and the figure of the "bookman" helped to spark a widespread awareness of books as printed objects and an interest in the physical dimensions of the readerly relationship to them. Article Abstracts
  • Mr Welt and Mr Walpit each built a special cage for the Bookman.
  • A haunter of bookshops since his childhood, he was a dyed in the wool bookman, and was perhaps the last Man of Letters to have read ‘everything’.
  • Or was he perhaps for ever on the itch to escape back to the bookman 's underbelly of the seventeenth century? DISPLACED PERSON
  • I said take the word bookman, B-O-O-K-M-A-N, change one letter in it, and rearrange the result to name a famous person who wrote books. Hopelessly Devoted To A Challenge
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