View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Wordsmith.

Wordsmith

Wordsmith | Wordsmiths

Wordsmith meaning

One who uses words skilfully.

Synonyms of Wordsmith

Example sentences (16)

Better Never Than Late is a beautifully written collection of stories and Chika Unigwe Chika Unigwe is a masterful wordsmith.

I know this talented, lovely, wordsmith, journalist and broadcaster would want me to say thank you from the bottom of her heart to all of her late-night family.

Long story short, the Irishman is a wordsmith.

Miles may not be a wordsmith, but he’s definitely not lacking in sass.

National Book Award-winning poet Mark Doty will lead the talk alongside Tucson-based wordsmith Joshua Wilkinson.

Wordsmith Stephen King, who had previously vowed he would never cough up, even telling Musk that Twitter should instead be paying him to post, appeared horrified to discover that he still had his blue check.

Feted by Allan Massie, no mean wordsmith himself, as the finest Scottish novelist of his generation, he has also been described as “Scotland’s Camus”, as in Albert of that ilk, French writer of The Rebel.

Isa Umar Gusau was an astute media strategist, a shrewd contriver, a versatile public relations expert, and a wordsmith who, despite his vast knowledge and connections, was ready to learn from others.

That the announcements collided was sheer coincidence, he says, but a happy one for the Scottish wordsmith.

After the album’s release, Nadia beamed when she was recognised by one of the most talented female rappers of the ’90s, American wordsmith, Foxy Brown.

A hidden message about the devil has been uncovered by scholars among the ten thousand lines of verse penned by the London-born wordsmith in 1667.

Among the more prominent switchovers to the Priyanka camp is wordsmith Sandeep Singh.

If mumble rap isn’t your thing, you might like Kadushin—she’s a nimble wordsmith, and she can sing, too.

She met up with AJ McKinney (aka “AJ the Wordsmith”), a friend from EWU who also shares a genuine love for poetry, later that night to propose what she was thinking.

The Lion and the Jewel is a thought provoking, values, re-evaluating but laughter inducing piece of work from the pen of the quintessential wordsmith, Wole Soyinka as interpreted for the stage play by the eclectic Crown Troupe of Africa.

His craftsmanship as a wordsmith is apparent even in his earliest attempts at this or that kind of poetry, but his handling of each genre tended to improve over time as he adapted it to his own needs.