[
US
/ˈfɪksɝ/
]
[ UK /fˈɪksɐ/ ]
[ UK /fˈɪksɐ/ ]
NOUN
- a skilled worker who mends or repairs things
- synthetic narcotic drug similar to morphine but less habit-forming; used in narcotic detoxification and maintenance of heroin addiction
- someone who intervenes with authorities for a person in trouble (usually using underhand or illegal methods for a fee)
- a chemical compound that sets or fixes something (as a dye or a photographic image)
How To Use fixer In A Sentence
- We found that we could get a brand-new home with a mountain view and large rooms for the boys for the same price as a fixer-upper.
- Although the price of the home doesn't reflect a fixer-upper, the original listing also says it is "waiting to be polished. Clarence J. Smale Los Feliz Home: Original Hollywood Glamour
- An unabashed populist and publicity seeker he is one of their key fundraisers and fixers.
- Read about how to buy condemned properties or a fixer-upper and make it worth your time and money.
- appreciation andcash flow anddescription ofequity buildup andfinancial analysis ofrent levels inreturn on investment intax savings on“fixer-uppers,” short-term investing in flyers foreclosure for-sale-by-owner FSBO: Nothing Down for the 2000s
- Known as one of the biggest fixers in all walks of British life - he advises the Prime Minister, has also been courted by the Conservatives and either chairs or sits on numerous public bodies - he probably set the merger ball rolling.
- Shortcut anyone with experience in fixer uppers in Mexico? Anyone with experience in fixer uppers in Mexico?
- While there will always be a market for cute little fixer-uppers, most buyers today want big houses with big, modern kitchens and bathrooms.
- Sometimes they bought fixer-uppers, which required cash to revitalize aging factories and old products.
- On the face of it, Vladimir Putin, the macho fixer, and Dmitry Medvedev, the dorkish lawyer, are polar opposites. Vladimir Putin, Dmitry Medvedev: So which of the old allies is truly in charge? | Tom Parfitt