Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of tyer.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • It's a compilation of his TU chapter newsletter articles, for tyers willing to look outside the box (or on the road) for fly tying materials.

    Winter Survival Tactics 2009

  • I've always thought the next best thing to actually fishing, was thinking about it ... and in both places you'll find plenty of things to capture the imagination, from expert fly tyers, to demonstrations, to destinations, and usually even a few good gear deals.

    SHOW Me the Flyfishing Tim Romano 2009

  • It's a compilation of his TU chapter newsletter articles, for tyers willing to look outside the box (or on the road) for fly tying materials.

    Winter Survival Tactics 2009

  • What are your favorite realistic fly tying blogs, sources, tyers?

    Realistic Fly Tying Blog 2009

  • All fly tyers, especially guides, like to have different patterns and shades that they test vigorously compared to the standard.

    Color Me Stupid Tim Romano 2007

  • Photographer Tim Romano and writer/trout guide Kirk Deeter took a trip up into the Colorado mountains to visit one of the state's iconoclastic fly tyers.

    The 2007 Top Ten Photo Gallery Countdown 2007

  • Reply ive heard of someone being in a car crash before where a big rod flew up from the cars tyers infront and went through the mans head, hes still alive and talking to this day.

    EXTRALIFE – By Scott Johnson - Oregon Man Survives 12 Nails to the Head 2006

  • He helped me to get the anchor short; then he went off in his dinghy and got the kedge for me, while I uncast the tyers to the main.

    Marazan Shute, Nevil, 1899-1960 1951

  • She brought some gray cloth and blue taffeta, signifying in her own way that she wished to have a new jacket and sailor’s trousers, such as she had seen the boys of the town wearing, with blue cuffs and tyers.

    Chapter IX. Book II 1917

  • By the roadside here the hay tyers, who cut up the hayricks into trusses, use balances -- a trifling matter, but sufficient to mark a difference, for in the west such men use a steelyard slung on a prong, the handle of the prong on the shoulder and the points stuck in the rick, with which to weigh the trusses.

    Nature Near London Richard Jefferies 1867

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