A bricklayer or bricky
A person who lays bricks and tiles
Bricklayer
The collective noun for bricks is a course of bricks.
you call this person a "confidante"
If you mean the noun "lay", the plural is "lays". If you mean the plural form of the verb, it is always lay: we lay, you lay, they lay. Note: lay is a transitive verb. One can lay eggs, tables, and other people! The past tense of "lay" is "laid". The form "lay" is also the past tense of the intransitive verb "lie". E.g. Everyday I lie on my back for an hour. / Yesterday I lay on my back for an hour.
Usually you would call the person a reader.
what do you call a person that takes ships into and out of port
A brick mason, a stone mason or a builder.
Builder
A person who lays tile can be called a tile fitter or tile layer. Some people call it a tile mason, too.
Mortar is used to stick bricks together.
masonry
Mortar is what is used to stick bricks together.
A bricklayer is someone that builds walls houses shops etc. when building there object they organise the equipment they will have to use and make sure that they have got enough malter, bricks etc.
"Lays" is correct for the third person singular present indicative of the transitive verb "lay", as in "Lay the tile quickly so that we can leave." A single third person who obeys this request lays the tile.
Wherever he lays his hat.
Those bricks are called adobe. (ah-doh-bee)
Hod carrier
a Mason