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  1. Oct 15, 2024 · Thanks to that Home Counties hack, doing a bodge, or being called a bodger, now indicates to most users of modern English that the individual involved is making a substandard job, a cobbled-together affair. Yet bodgers in the real countryside still cling to their status as artisans worthy of praise.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BodgingBodging - Wikipedia

    Bodging (full name chair-bodgering[a]) is a traditional woodturning craft, using green (unseasoned) wood to make chair legs and other cylindrical parts of chairs. The work was done close to where a tree was felled. The itinerant craftsman who made the chair legs was known as a bodger or chair-bodger. According to Collins Dictionary, the use of ...

  3. Bodger was a guy called Andy who used to live up the Rd from me in Brighton. Used to see him in the local Hanover pubs. He unfortunately passed away after a long battle with cancer.

  4. Feb 25, 2017 · Bodgers were wood turners who worked in the beech woods around the furniture-making town of High Wycombe in England. They would cut, split and turn the beech trees where they fell, then.

  5. You might find the word bodge, meaning to botch or mend clumsily. However, actually a bodger was a skilled craftsman that made chair legs and braces. The craft of bodging goes back about five hundred years but I am unaware of anyone making a living as a bodger these days.

  6. No-one knows exactly where the name ‘bodger’ comes from – one idea is that it was a derogatory term used by workers in furniture factories when referring to men who worked in the woods and has links with doing a ‘bodged job’.

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  8. Feb 15, 2016 · A bodger is a Highly skilled wood worker mainly working with freshly cut green wood. I know a few people with the Sir Name Bodger. It is a shame so many people use the word incorrectly.

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