By milling grain into flour.
By milling grain into flour.
makes grain into flour
Corn is an English surname for a grain merchant or miller.
groud grain into flour and used it to make bread
He (or she) mills that is turns grain into flour
Many surnames (family names) originated from the name of a livelihood. For instance, Fletcher was someone who made arrows. Miller was a miller of grain - a common nickname is "Dusty Miller" for anyone named Miller, as a miller was often covered in flour dust!
Yes, the noun 'miller' is a concrete noun, a word for someone who owns or works in a grain mill; a word for a physical person.
Miller in Greek means apple ANSWER: Actually, the Greek word for apple is "milo," which kind of sounds like Miller, but not really. The surname Miller refers to a person who owned or worked in a grain mill. It is not of Greek origin.
This question has a lot of answers (thanks to the urban dictionary - google it), with the official concise dictionary answer being: A Miller is a person who own or uses a mill to crush grain, in order to make flour.
A miller is a person who operates a mill. This can be used to grind wheat into flour. Traditional mills were water wheel or wind operated, these were later replaced by steam and other methods of powering the mill. In non-motorised or poor societies, grain is still ground by pounding grain in a mortar with a pestle. This very labour intensive and time consuming task is usually done by women.
The miller was very important to medieval society,and his day would start very early in the morning straight off to the mill to begin grinding grain. Throughout the day all the miller would do was grind grain into flour to make bread. He was paid in grain, about one twelfth or one sixteenth of the amount of grain he ground was his pay. He was also often known for stealing because of the bad pay. The baker utilised him a lot. His day ened late sunset. Overall the miller works effortlessly from early morning to late sunset to grind flour into bread.