From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishtradesmantrades‧man /ˈtreɪdzmən/ noun (plural tradesmen /-mən/) [countable] 1 British EnglishBBTSELL someone who buys and sells goods or services, especially in a shop2 especially American EnglishBO someone who works at a job or trade that involves skill with your hands3 British EnglishBBTSELL someone who goes to people’s houses to sell or deliver goods
Examples from the Corpus
tradesman• He pauses at a second-hand book store, where the man who waits on him is unlike a tradesman.• You're apprenticed to a different tradesman each week, so no ties are formed.• A number of experienced tradesmen were also posted from Marham to Watton to assist with the extra workload.• Mudge had an earned reputation as a fine craftsman and a fair tradesman.• Tabel took none of these craftsmen into his workshop but employed immigrant tradesmen such as Tschudi, Kirckmann and Willbrook.• The later Victorian undertakers were arguably the most backward-looking tradesmen of their day.• I enjoyed working with the outside tradesmen.