From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishblacksmithblack‧smith /ˈblækˌsmɪθ/ noun [countable] BODSHsomeone who makes and repairs things made of iron, especially horseshoes SYN smith
Examples from the Corpus
blacksmith• She returned to Bay City to be greeted by her long lost brother, Montgomery Edson, a blacksmith.• Suppose a blacksmith does develop big muscles.• The carpenter and blacksmith hurriedly fashion a new one, and Ahab has a new harpoon fashioned from the finest iron.• Also patron of armorers, blacksmiths, locksmiths, musicians, and silversmiths.• Among nine taken into custody were a weaver, sawyer, carpenter, brewer, blacksmith and several servants.• The missions were not merely churches but entire working communities, with farms, blacksmiths, flour mills and residences.• The blacksmith was a lady by the name of Rachael Levitt.Origin blacksmith (1400-1500) black (from black metal “iron”) + smith