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    1. Re: [ABERDEEN] Occupation Help
    2. Gavin Bell
    3. Kathleen Ogg-Moss wrote: > Is a joiner and a wright the same thing? Would a person be called a wright > in Scotland and a joiner in England? That is partly dependent on the time-period under consideration. "Wright" is not a term in modern use, while "joiner" still is. There may also be a difference in scope of the two terms. Traditional English usage would distinguish between a carpenter, who does the woodworking part of housebuilding, such as roofs and floors, and a joiner, who does finer work involving more complex joints, such as cupboards and rough furniture. The older Scots term wright does not make this distinction, possibly because, in smaller communities, the one woodworker would do everything. This would include making coffins, and the local wright was consequently often also the undertaker (or mortician). Gavin Bell

    01/01/2010 11:10:49