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7-letter words that end in man

  • decuman — a huge wave
  • deskman — a person who works at a desk in a workplace, esp the police sergeant in charge in a police station or a copy editor in a news office
  • discman — a small portable CD player with light headphones
  • dockman — A man who works on a dock.
  • doorman — the door attendant of an apartment house, nightclub, etc., who acts as doorkeeper and may perform minor services for entering and departing residents or guests.
  • doryman — a person who uses a dory, especially a person who engages in fishing, lobstering, etc.
  • drayman — a person who drives a dray.
  • drogman — Alternative form of dragoman.
  • dustman — a person employed to remove or cart away garbage, refuse, ashes, etc.; garbage collector.
  • eastmanGeorge, 1854–1932, U.S. philanthropist and inventor in the field of photography.
  • edelmanGerald Maurice, 1929–2014, U.S. biochemist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1972.
  • eijkman — Christiaan (ˈkriːstiːˌaːn). 1858–1930, Dutch physician, who discovered that beriberi is caused by nutritional deficiency: Nobel prize for physiology or medicine 1929
  • end man — a man at the end of a row
  • faceman — a miner who works at the coalface, esp one who uses explosives
  • fat man — the code name for the plutonium-core, implosion-type atom bomb the U.S. first tested and then dropped on Nagasaki in 1945.
  • feynmanRichard Phillips, 1918–1988, U.S. physicist: Nobel Prize 1965.
  • fireman — a person employed to extinguish or prevent fires; firefighter.
  • flagman — a person who signals with a flag or lantern, as at a railroad crossing.
  • flaxmanJohn, 1755–1826, English sculptor and draftsman.
  • footman — a liveried servant who attends the door or carriage, waits on table, etc.
  • foreman — a person in charge of a particular department, group of workers, etc., as in a factory or the like.
  • freeman — a person who is free; a person who enjoys personal, civil, or political liberty.
  • fretman — A guitar player, especially one who plays acoustic guitar.
  • frogman — a swimmer specially equipped with air tanks, wet suit, diving mask, etc., for underwater demolition, salvage, military operations, scientific exploration, etc.
  • frohmanCharles, 1860–1915, U.S. theatrical producer.
  • fyrdman — An English militiaman of the Saxon period; often a land worker called to arms in support of the King or a local Lord. The fyrdmen were usually armed with either swords or spears.
  • gadsman — a person who uses a gad to drive animals
  • gateman — a gatekeeper.
  • gleeman — (in medieval times) an itinerant singer; minstrel.
  • god man — Jesus Christ.
  • god-man — Jesus Christ.
  • goldman — Edwin Franko [frang-koh] /ˈfræŋ koʊ/ (Show IPA), 1878–1956, U.S. composer and bandmaster.
  • goodman — the master of a household; husband.
  • gownman — Archaic form of gownsman.
  • gripman — a worker on a cable car who operates the grip, which, by grasping or releasing the moving cable, starts or stops the car.
  • hackman — the driver of a hack or taxi.
  • hangman — a person who hangs criminals who are condemned to death; public executioner.
  • hanuman — Also called entellus. a langur, Presbytis (Semnopithecus) entellus, held sacred in India.
  • hardman — (slang) A man who is particularly tough or muscular.
  • headman — a chief or leader.
  • heliman — a helicopter pilot
  • hellmanLillian Florence, 1905–84, U.S. playwright.
  • herdman — (obsolete) Someone who herds animals; a herdsman. (11th-17th c.).
  • highman — A man of rank, especially a high rank; a superior.
  • hillmanSidney, 1887–1946, U.S. labor leader, born in Lithuania.
  • hit man — a hired killer, especially a professional killer from the underworld.
  • hoffman — Malvina [mal-vee-nuh] /mælˈvi nə/ (Show IPA), 1887–1966, U.S. sculptor.
  • hoodman — a man wearing a hood over his head
  • hoopman — a basketball player.
  • hoseman — a fireman
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