fiddler

Etymology
From, from , from. .

So called because the fiddle would sometimes be played to cheer the sailors working there.

Noun

 * 1) One who plays the fiddle.
 * 2) One who fiddles; a cheat.
 * 3) * 2005, Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, The drama of my life (in The Independent online, )
 * We were the self-controlled, cautious, nifty merchants, decorous fiddlers of accounts, hoarders of wealth, excellent bribers, family and community creatures governed by manners.
 * 1) One who fiddles or tweaks.
 * 2) A burrowing crab of the genus Gelasimus, of many species. The male has one claw very much enlarged, and often holds it in a position similar to that in which a musician holds a fiddle.
 * 3) The common European sandpiper ; so called because it habitually wags its tail up and down resembling the back and forth movement of a fiddler.
 * 4) A large species of cicada,, of eastern Australia; cherry nose.
 * 5)  A coin of little value: a sixpence or a farthing.
 * 6)  The capstan-house on a steamer.
 * 1)  The capstan-house on a steamer.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: цигулар
 * Czech:
 * Danish: spillemand
 * Dutch: ,
 * Finnish:
 * Georgian: მევიოლინე
 * German:
 * Hungarian:
 * Irish: fidléir
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål: spellemann, spillemann
 * Nynorsk: spelemann
 * Ottoman Turkish: كامنچه‌جی
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese: rabequista, rabequeiro
 * Russian:
 * Scottish Gaelic: fìdhlear
 * Swedish: fiolspelman,