Concept cluster: Social systems > Groundskeeping
n
A youth organization supported and sponsored by the United States Department of Agriculture, offering courses and lessons in agriculture and home economics.
n
(dated, slang) A travelling salesman.
n
Alternative form of barrack-room lawyer. [(military slang) A know-it-all.]
n
Someone who goes to the beach.
n
One whose job is to control access to and maintain a beach.
n
(India) A waiter in a hotel or restaurant.
n
A worker who uses a workbench.
n
A man who works on auto bodies.
n
(Sussex) Alternative form of borstal [(UK) A way up a hill in the South Downs.]
n
(US) Synonym of bouncing castle
n
(UK, historical) A Victorian social event for young people.
n
(South Africa, slang) A cheap and dirty cinema.
n
A carwasher, especially one who has immigrated to the United States from a Latin American country.
n
Alternative spelling of casting couch [(euphemistic) The now illegal practice of soliciting sexual favors from a job applicant in exchange for employment in the entertainment industry.]
n
Alternative form of causewayman [A man employed to build a causeway.]
n
(US, military, slang) A medic.
n
(obsolete) A dealer in porcelain (china). [18th–19th c.]
n
(slang) A police station.
n
Alternative form of daugh (“Scots land unit”) [(historical) An obsolete Scots unit equal to 4 ploughgates, notionally comprising 400 Scottish acres.]
n
Alternative form of deliveryman [Someone employed to make deliveries.]
n
(UK) A miniature house used by children as a toy for recreating domestic settings.
n
(historical) A person employed as a barker to solicit customers for a photographer.
n
A woman employed in making drawings.
n
draughtsmanship by a woman
n
Alternative spelling of dumbwaiter [A small elevator used to move food etc. from one floor of a building to another.]
n
Alternative form of farmhand [A person who works on a farm.]
n
A man who works on a farm.
n
Alternative form of field hand [(chiefly US) An outdoor worker on a farm, plantation, or ranch.]
n
(now rare) An agricultural labourer.
n
A soldier who goes on foot, without a horse.
n
(archaic) A soldier who marches and fights on foot; a foot soldier.
n
A slave that travels by foot carrying items for his master.
n
Foot soldiers collectively.
n
One appointed to look after a forest.
n
(US and Canada, historical) An independent fur trapper.
n
Alternative form of fugleman [The member of a military group who leads the way or demonstrates drill; hence, someone who keeps the beat or timing, and/or demonstrates motions in other contexts.]
n
A funhouse.
n
Alternative form of gamekeeper [A person employed to maintain the game for hunting and all associated materials and effects. Often shortened to keeper.]
n
The keeping of game; the occupation of a gamekeeper.
n
One who gatekeeps.
n
A graveyard attendant.
n
(colloquial) An automobile mechanic.
n
Alternative spelling of greenkeeper [(golf) An employee responsible for the maintenance of a golf course.]
n
(golf) An employee responsible for the maintenance of a golf course.
n
Alternative form of greenkeeper [(golf) An employee responsible for the maintenance of a golf course.]
n
A member of a film crew responsible for taking care of plants and other outdoor landscaping materials.
n
A man who works from the ground alongside others who climb or work on a lift, ladder, hoist, etc.
n
Alternative form of groundsman [A male groundskeeper.]
n
Alternative form of groundskeeper [Someone who takes care of the upkeep of grounds (gardens, a playing field, woodlands, etc.)]
n
Alternative form of groundsman [A male groundskeeper.]
n
Someone who takes care of the upkeep of grounds (gardens, a playing field, woodlands, etc.)
n
The activity of tending an area of land for aesthetic or functional purposes; typically as an employee of a person or institution
n
A male groundskeeper.
n
The staff who maintain the grounds of a school, sports facility, etc.
n
A person responsible for the upkeep of a hangar
n
Alternative spelling of hatchet man [A male professional killer or gunman.]
n
(US) A Halloween amusement attraction in which a building or series of rooms is decorated to frighten the people who pass through the attraction.
n
One who maintains a hut that can be used by hikers, climbers, etc.
n
Either of the bedrooms of a Jack and Jill suite.
n
(Southern US) Synonym of juke (“type of roadside cafe or bar”)
n
A lounge where KTV takes place.
n
landwaiter
n
(chiefly Western US, historical) A saloon located at the end of a road or the outskirts of a town.
n
garden party
n
An entry-level worker on an oil rig, responsible for general labour and maintenance.
n
A little boy's bedroom.
n
Alternative spelling of mall rat [(US) Someone who frequently loiters in a shopping mall.]
n
(obsolete) A marksman.
n
A woman skilled at hitting targets, as with a firearm, bow, or thrown object.
n
Marksmanship exhibited by a markswoman.
n
(obsolete) Someone who deals in meal (the grain).
n
A female midshipman.
n
(humorous) A notional club that one joins by having sex aboard a train.
n
(UK) a building where monkeys are exhibited to the public
n
A frenetically chaotic place.
n
A man who spends time in outdoor pursuits or sports.
n
Agricultural work done outdoors in the fields.
n
Alternative spelling of parkkeeper [One who looks after a park and maintains its grounds.]
n
A parkkeeper.
n
(Britain, slang) A parking warden or traffic warden.
n
One who looks after a park and maintains its grounds.
n
A person who works in a warehouse locating stored items and packaging them for delivery.
n
Alternative form of pivotman [(military) A pivot; the soldier around whom a body of troops wheels.]
n
Synonym of pleasure ground
n
Alternative form of point man [(military) In combat, the soldier who takes point; the soldier who assumes the first and most exposed position in a combat military formation; the lead soldier/unit advancing through hostile or unsecured territory.]
n
(UK, historical) A person employed around the coastlines of Britain in the 18th century to investigate smuggling.
n
An auctioneer's assistant who spots bids and communicates information back to the auctioneer.
n
Alternative form of ripper (“one who brings fish from the seacoast to markets in inland towns”) [Something that rips something else.]
n
A worker who carries out road construction or maintenance.
n
Alternative form of roundsman [A worker who makes rounds, especially in order to deliver goods.]
n
(Britain, colloquial) An officer or private of the Royal Engineers.
n
(automotive) A person who repairs cars as a hobby.
n
A sideman or sidewoman.
n
(UK, dated) A shameful secret.
n
(historical) A black African or mulatto slave trader.
n
A ranger or park service employee that deals with the public.
n
Alternative form of spade man [A man who works with a spade.]
n
(uncountable, UK, military, slang) Guard duty.
n
(obsolete) A standel.
n
(Australia, informal) A person who spends a lot of time on the streets.
n
A religious rite of Ancient Rome, the triple sacrifice of a pig, a ram, and a bull to the deity Mars in order to bless and purify land.
adj
(informal) Resembling or characteristic of a tourist trap.
n
A series of related toys produced by the same company.
n
(Australia, New Zealand, informal) A tradesman, a tradesperson.
n
A person skilled in outdoor survival on the trail.
n
(slang, drugs, African-American Vernacular) Alternative form of trap house [(slang) A place where illegal drugs are manufactured, packaged for sale, or sold on the street.]
n
(obsolete) A table companion; a tablemate.
n
(dated) A seller of tripe.
n
Synonym of troll farm
n
(US) A person employed to clean or park cars.
n
One who operates a warehouse.
n
A person responsible for the maintenance and upkeep of a body of water.
n
(historical) A convict sentenced to hard labor in the 1800s, especially one sentenced to work maintaining the roads.
n
A gallery or dome constructed so that even quiet sounds travel a long way.
n
(job-specific jargon, dated) Lighthouse-keeper's assistant, whose responsibilities typically included the tending and trimming of wicks for the light.
n
(Australia, dated) A person who performs odd jobs; a rouseabout or handyperson.
n
(historical) A king's officer who looked after woods and the game in them, arranged woodmotes, arrested trespassers, etc.
n
A worker in a railway yard.
n
(nonstandard, rare) A yardman of any gender.
n
The foreman or man in charge of the activities in a yard (train yard, prison yard, stock yard, etc).

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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