Get Free Checker

plyer

NOUN
  1. someone who plies a trade

How To Use plyer In A Sentence

  • November 17th, 2008 at 1: 15 pm can you tell me how i can download this song-the yahoo media plyer on your site / server doesn't allow downloads??? never used to be this way Aurgasm
  • Comment posted by BOB A. BOOEY on March 31, 2009 at 10: 51 pm (#943149) yes but we must get another afr american plyer if we dump marlon per ny times!!!! right Mets Geek
  • To the end of this the assistant now touched his pontil, upon whose end he had taken up a little more glass, and this, being twisted in a ring round the foot of the stem, divided from the pontil by a huge pair of scissors, dexterously shaped with the plyers, and finally smoothed with a battledoor, became the foot of the wine-glass. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 83, September, 1864
  • Each plyer must coordinate his or her actions with others, and they must do it not simply in a reflective, leisurely fashion, but on the fly, in an embodied and urgent manner; the goal is to be able to act and react as a group, ready to face any new contingency that presents itself. I Love the Smell of Burning Crusade in the Morning
  • Comment posted by Ramon on March 31, 2009 at 10: 53 pm yes but we must get another afr american plyer if we dump marlon per ny times!!!! right Mets Geek
  • Batsman Gautam Gambhir has become the latest plyer on India's injured list. BBC News - Home
  • An attendant then presented to him a lump of melted glass on the end of his pontil, and the workman, deftly twisting it round the neck of his decanter, clipped it off with a pair of scissors, and proceeded to smooth and shape it by means of the plyers. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 83, September, 1864
  • Plyers are a smaller kind of pincers, and are used for small work in the same way. The Book of Sports: Containing Out-door Sports, Amusements and Recreations, Including Gymnastics, Gardening & Carpentering
  • To the end of this the assistant now touched his pontil, upon whose end he had taken up a little more glass, and this, being twisted in a ring round the foot of the stem, divided from the pontil by a huge pair of scissors, dexterously shaped with the plyers, and finally smoothed with a battledoor, became the foot of the wine-glass. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 83, September, 1864
  • These were first moulded in the shape of great tumblers with an excessively ugly pattern printed on the sides, then softened in a glory-hole, and brought to a workman, who, by means of plyers and battledoor, elongated and shaped the neck, leaving a queer, ragged lip at the top. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 83, September, 1864
View all