mosser

mosser

(ˈmɒsə)
n
1. (Historical Terms) a 17th century raider or bandit in the Scottish borders
2. (Building) a person who puts moss around the tiles or slates of a roof
3. (Agriculture) Scot a person who works cutting and preparing peat
4. Irish a person who collects moss
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Jamie Mosser, a former Kane County prosecutor, has declared her candidacy as a Democrat.
Jack Graham, Elizabeth Mosser, Jeffrey Paxson, Susan Stover and Meaghan Yurek have been elected to the board of directors with Harford Family House, which provides services to entire families with children experiencing homelessness.
Its team worked on behalf of the borrower, Mosser Capital (Mosser), to secure the six-year (including extension options), floating-rate loan through an affiliate of Walton Street Capital, L.L.C.
Mosser. "This supports our recent strategic focus on delivering high performance and sustainable packaging solutions for our customers in the food, pet food, medical and pharmaceutical markets."
The Austrian Federal Railways (ABB) spokesman Robert Mosser told the news agency APA: "When attaching coaches to the Nightjet 467 from Zurich to Vienna, a shunting locomotive with wagons should have hit the stationary train at 4:46 a.m.
San Francisco Bay Area California, US-based urban workforce housing specialist Mosser Companies has now established a presence in Southern California's Los Angeles, the company said.
Vance Kawakami, DVM [1,2]; Amanda Casto, MD [3]; Niranjana Natarajan, MD [4]; Anna Snyder, MD [3]; Jonathan Mosser, MD [5]; Jesse Bonwitt, BVSc [2,6]; Matthew P.
According to Michael Mosser, a lecturer in the International Relations and Global Governance program at the University of Texas at Austin, "it's definitely an apples-to-oranges comparison between Hawaii and Texas."