hostler

Etymology
From, from , from , from , , from "inn", from  "hospitable", from  "host, guest". Both hostler and its alternative form originally meant simply "innkeeper", and acquired a specific association with horses in the second half of the 14th century. .

Noun

 * 1) A worker employed at an inn, hostelry, or stable to look after horses; a groom.
 * 2)  A railway worker employed to care for a locomotive or other large engine; especially, a yard jockey.
 * 1)  A railway worker employed to care for a locomotive or other large engine; especially, a yard jockey.

Translations

 * Azerbaijani:, atabaxan, sayis
 * Bulgarian: коняр
 * Dutch:
 * Hebrew:
 * Kurdish:
 * Northern Kurdish:
 * Latin: agāsō
 * Macedonian: ко́њушар, ко́њар
 * Polish:
 * Russian: ко́нюх (на постоя́лом дворе́)
 * Swedish:
 * Turkish:


 * Polish:
 * Russian: ремонтный слесарь (remóntny slésar')
 * Swedish: underhållsarbetare
 * Turkish: