weaver

পটকার
definition
noun
We set out for the neighbouring village of Kethan, where simple weavers wove the delicate fabric of cotton and silk embroidered with gold and silver.
a person who weaves fabric.
A weaver bird uses its own body as a template as it builds the hemispherical egg chamber of its nest.
a finchlike songbird of tropical Africa and Asia, related to the sparrows and building elaborately woven nests.
translation of 'weaver'
তাঁতী
noun
পটকার,
বয়নশিল্পী,
বাবুইপাখি
example
The library has recently acquired a 'weaver' 's pattern book printed in the seventeenth century described by the textile historian Patricia Hilts as the earliest known example of its genre.
The 'weaver' will feed the cuckoo's chick together with her own two chicks.
The sociable 'weaver' is endemic to southern Africa, with its core distribution being in the Northern Cape and Namibia.
In the early 1800s, the French 'weaver' Joseph Jacquard invented a loom in which a series of punched cards controlled the patterns of cloth and carpet produced.
It had two butchers, two coopers, two 'weavers' , a shoemaker, blacksmith, a cornmill, a pound, a lime kiln and, of course, a pub.
Well, each one of them is not only a piece of art but represents magic created on wild silk by traditional 'weavers' .
In Kanchipuram, a centre of silk weaving, male 'weavers' alone were recognised by the government cooperatives.
A 'weaver bird' uses its own body as a template as it builds the hemispherical egg chamber of its nest.
To burn those extra calories, a colony of 150 'weavers' with no nest would have to catch and eat 4,500 more insects each day.
Those who make their living as blacksmiths, 'weavers' , potters, or musicians are looked upon with some disfavor and suspicion.
Armed with the strongest and finest cotton thread in the world, Bolton's 'weavers' were able to produce the finest cotton material in the world.
It is also beautiful and tranquil and I have seen kingfishers there as well as hundreds of 'weavers' .
The largest group were Huguenots, many of them silk 'weavers' , silversmiths, and furniture makers.
All the animals had gathered there - giraffes, hippos, antelope, buffalo, warthogs, zebras, aardvarks, hyenas, mongooses, storks and 'weaver birds' .
On the whole, it is an earnest attempt to preserve traditional crafts from extinction and to help skilled craftsmen and 'weavers' , who are living in penury.
Different streets were allotted for different professions such as potters, 'weavers' , dyers, jewellers, and bakers.
He lists the names of dyers, 'weavers' , and embroiderers where possible.
During three days in the park, we saw everything from lions, rhinos, and giraffes to herds of impalas and flocks of 'weaver birds' , so named because they weave nests that hang pendant-like from trees.
People usually specialized in a particular trade, barrel makers, wheelwrights, 'weavers' and so forth.
He can trace his ancestors in this area back to 1650, a long line of shepherds, coopers, 'weavers' and the occasional collier.
This led to an enormous leap in productivity especially among tool makers, 'weavers' and metal workers.
Calling all Bolton ex-mill workers, carders, spinners, winders and 'weavers' … someone wants to hear your story.
We set out for the neighbouring village of Kethan, where simple 'weavers' wove the delicate fabric of cotton and silk embroidered with gold and silver.
This was not the case in parts of Ulster, where a substantial proportion of linen 'weavers' were not independent producers but wage-workers.
Well they're in the trees in our street… All the usual ones - sunbirds, 'weavers' , orioles and so on.
The 'weavers' ' primary reptilian enemies are the boomslang and the Cape cobra.
Almost everyone employed the carpenter's skill in some way, from fishermen and 'weavers' to shoe-makers.
Women are expert 'weavers' and dyers and make their own cloth.
Silver wire was used by embroiderers, lace-makers and 'weavers' for embellishing high-quality fabrics.
Credits: Google Translate