paviour

English

Noun

paviour (plural paviours)

  1. A person who lays paving slabs.
    • 1778 April 3, “Appendix. Report from the Committee on the State of the Pavements, &c. in the Streets of Dublin”, in The Journals of the House of Commons, of the Kingdom of Ireland, [], volume XX, Dublin: Printed by Abraham Bradley and Abraham Bradley King, [], published 1782, OCLC 264474860, page 539:
      [T]he Contract with the Pipe-water Pavior was, as he recollects, to keep the Pavement in Repair for ſix Weeks; []
    • 1853, Charles Dickens, Household Words (volume 6, page 387)
      A "mooner," fond of staring into shop windows, or watching the labourers pulling up the pavement to inspect the gas-pipes, or listening stolidly to the dull "pech" of the paviour's rammer on the flags.
  2. A machine that is used to tamp down paving slabs.
  3. A brick or slab used for paving.

Alternative forms

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