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Posted By: Elizabeth Creith occupation word - 03/22/05 11:23 AM
I make whistles, and I'm looking for a word that describes a maker of whistles or wind instruments as "luthier" describes a maker of stringed instruments. Any ideas?

Thanks,
Elizabeth

Posted By: Buffalo Shrdlu Re: occupation word - 03/22/05 11:43 AM
James Abbot McNeill might know...

welcome, Elizabeth!

Posted By: tsuwm Re: occupation word - 03/22/05 04:43 PM
whistlemaker?
whistlecarver??
whistlewright! (from wood)
whistlesmith! (from metal)

Posted By: Jackie Re: occupation word - 03/22/05 04:49 PM
...and what will she become whenever she quits making them?

Posted By: TEd Remington Re: occupation word - 03/22/05 05:56 PM
That was my thought, eta: The whistle's mother

Posted By: Father Steve Re: occupation word - 03/23/05 04:28 AM
I suspect that there is no English word for a person who makes whistles other than "whistle maker."


Posted By: Faldage Re: occupation word - 03/23/05 11:30 AM
no English word

Onelook's reverse dictionary sure wasn't much help. I scanned through its first 300 offerings to no avail.

Posted By: AnnaStrophic Re: bells and whistles - 03/23/05 12:30 PM
FWIW, we recently had this same problem with reverse lookup when someone asked what a maker of bells is called.

Posted By: dxb Re: occupation word - 03/23/05 12:49 PM
Onelook's reverse dictionary sure wasn't much help. I scanned through its first 300 offerings to no avail.


Wish I'd known - I'd a started at t'other end .

Posted By: themilum Re: occupation word - 03/23/05 03:25 PM
Good news, Elizabeth Creith, there doesn't seem to be
a preexisting word to singularly describe your particular skill.

Soooo...

How about Whistlemaster or flutemasters?

Or maybe, whistlecrafter or windmaker
(naw, forget windmaker. people are so crude)

Let's see...we could suffix -artisans...whistleart?
No? Ok, how about whistlesudras, you know, after India's lowly artisan caste?

Me, personally, I like the Germanic sounding...guildersflute.

But best of all, I like... whistlemysteries.

Definition: my-ster-ies (archaic) craft making

What do ya think?


Posted By: Jackie Re: occupation word - 03/23/05 03:51 PM
Welcome to you, Elizabeth--sorry I omitted that yesterday.
Who'd have ever thunk this? Not I, that's for sure. Apparently some whistle-makers are potters:
http://www.sifflets-en-terre-cuite.org/HtmlE/Prod/PotTradi.html

Googling "history of making whistles" elicits some fascinating reading!

Posted By: plutarch Re: occupation word - 03/23/05 07:04 PM
a maker of whistles or wind instruments as "luthier" describes a maker of stringed instruments. Any ideas?

Hi, Elizabeth:

I'm a former member but I'm intrigued by your question and I think you might be looking for a word which is broader in scope than a maker of "whistles", just as a "luthier" is broader in scope than a maker of violins or other specific stringed instrument.

Specifically, you said "whistles or wind instruments".

A whistle belongs to the family of wind instruments known as "aerophone"*.

An "aerophonist" would be a person who plays a wind instrument, like a whistle, wouldn't you think?

Do you think we could get away with calling a maker of wind instruments an "aerophonier" [as the wind instrument counterpart of a "luthier"]?

* Music Dictionary: Aerophone
[Gr. aeros - air + phone - sound]

An instrument such as the flute, whistle, and horn that produces sound by using air as the primary vibrating means.

http://www.music.vt.edu/musicdictionary/texta/Aerophone.html




Posted By: Elizabeth Creith Re: occupation word - 03/26/05 12:21 PM
Wow, what a lot of interesting suggestions! I thought about using "whistlesmith" because I already use "buttonsmith" - I make ceramic buttons as well as whistles. (If you want to see my whistles, my website is www.hedgehogceramics.ca.)I liked "whistlewright" better, but was really hoping for a traditional word. Oh, well. But all of these are great suggestions! Who knows what else will turn up?
I thought there was a word for "bellmaker", too! Surprising to find there isn't.


Posted By: belMarduk Re: occupation word - 03/28/05 03:42 PM
Wistlesmith does sound nice but it would mean that you make the whistles out of metal only.

As tsuwm touched upon above, a smith is a person that works metal, and a wright works with other materials to make or repair things.

What is wrong with whistlemaker Elizabeth? It's pretty self-explanatory.

Posted By: Elizabeth Creith Re: occupation word - 03/28/05 08:23 PM
There's nothing wrong with whistlemaker per se, I just was hoping for something more - oh, I don't know - picturesque.

Posted By: musick Re: occupation word - 03/28/05 10:00 PM
Fifesmith

- or -

Fluthier

... as long as it starts with "f" sound.

Posted By: Elizabeth Creith Re: occupation word - 03/28/05 11:57 PM
Fluthier! I love it! Thanks, musick!

Posted By: Jackie Re: occupation word - 03/29/05 01:43 AM
If a maker of flutes is a flutier, what is a maker of flues?

Posted By: TEd Remington What is a maker of flues? - 03/29/05 09:46 AM
Floozier?

Posted By: Elizabeth Creith Re: What is a maker of flues? - 03/29/05 01:15 PM
Oh, I think "floozy" is an absolute, like "unique". You can't be "more unique", so you probably can't be floozier...

Posted By: TEd Remington Re: What is a maker of flues? - 03/29/05 01:22 PM
Ask those people from Flindiana.

Floozier daddy??

Posted By: Jackie Re: What is a maker of flues? - 03/29/05 01:27 PM
<GRIN> Y'all got it!

Posted By: Father Steve Floozy - 03/29/05 08:08 PM
I'm supposed to be on retreat with the Benedictines at this very moment and not concentrating on mundane things like floozies, but

http://www.randomhouse.com/wotd/index.pperl?date=20001113


Posted By: TEd Remington Re: Floozy - 03/29/05 09:52 PM
Glad to see that plural on Benedictine, there, Fr Steve, said TEd cordially.

Posted By: maverick Re: Floozy - 03/29/05 10:09 PM
> mundane things like floozies

Your weeks start better than mine!

Posted By: Faldage Re: What is a maker of flues? - 03/29/05 10:35 PM
You can't be "more unique"

You ain't been hanging around here long enough. We're all unique but musick is definitely more unique than any of the rest of us, more than some of us put together. Ledasdottir comes pretty close, too.

Posted By: Father Steve Re: Floozy - 03/29/05 11:54 PM
TEd sez: "Glad to see that plural on Benedictine, there, Fr Steve, said TEd cordially."

There is no Benedictine in evidence here at the Mount Angel Abbey, but many Benedictines in their black hooded robes. There is no liquor at all, that I have seen, 'tho the brothers own quite a bit of farmland here in the fertile Willamette Valley, including some devoted to the growing of wine grapes and lots devoted to the growing of hops. ...said Father Steve dryly.

Posted By: maverick Re: What is a maker of flues? - 03/29/05 11:59 PM
> but musick is definitely more unique than any of the rest of us, more than some of us put together. Ledasdottir comes pretty close, too.

ROFLMAO! You da man Fong :)

Posted By: of troy Re: What is a maker of flues? - 03/30/05 03:13 AM
mav--its a well known fact i am only (on average) 2 standard deviations from the norm..

hardly unique.. not even a proper outlier... just 2 standard deviations... (some times just barely that .. but lets not quibble about numbers that small.

Posted By: maverick Re: One flue over the Cuckoo's nest - 03/30/05 09:47 AM
shriek! a deviant in our midst - how did we never notice before now? oh, yeah, she fits in perfickly... :]

Posted By: Faldage Re: What is a maker of flues? - 03/30/05 11:23 AM
only (on average) 2 standard deviations from the norm

There's always gotta be one.

Posted By: musick Alone together - 03/30/05 05:13 PM
...more than some of us put together...

Well, I do declare: "That's the nicest thing nobody has never said to me..." and ya know I all ways reply on the *kindness of strangers, newbies, journeypeoples, members...

Posted By: Alex Williams Re: Alone together - 03/30/05 07:19 PM
I propose "flutewright" or "flautwright."

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