A person, typically male, who makes technical drawings or plans; an alternative term for draftsman.
Compound of 'draught' + 'man,' reflecting the profession of someone who draws technical plans, used primarily in British English.
The masculine-only 'draughtman' is becoming outdated as 'draughtsperson' or 'draughtswoman' gain popularity—word evolution shows how English adapts when society's gender roles change!
'-man' suffix historically marked occupation as male domain; women draughtspeople were invisible in language and professional recognition, despite substantial contributions to architectural and technical fields.
Use 'drafter,' 'technical draughtsperson,' or 'draughtsperson' in modern contexts. When referring to mixed or unspecified groups, use plural 'draughtspeople' or 'drafters.'
["drafter","draughtsperson","technical specialist","draughtspeople"]
Women have been essential to architectural, engineering, and technical drawing since the 19th century, often uncredited. Recognition of historical female drafters and architects (like Zaha Hadid, Julia Morgan, and countless anonymous technical staff) corrects this erasure.
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