labor[noun]Synonyms: work, bullwork, donkeywork, drudgery, grind, moil, slavery, slogging, toil, travail, birth pang(s), childbearing, childbirth
[verb]Synonyms: drive, moil, strain, strive, toil, tug, work, till, cultivate, dress, tend
Contrasted words: ease, leisure, relaxation, repose, rest, amusement, diversion, entertainment, recreation, idleness, inactivity, inertia, inertness, passiveness, idle, laze, loaf, lounge, goof (off), shirk, dawdle, poke, putter
Related Idioms: break one's neck
Related Words: endeavor,
struggle [TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary ▲
II. labour1 S2 W1 AC British English,
labor American English noun [
Word Family: noun:
labour,
labourer;
verb:
labour]
1. WORK [uncountable] work, especially physical work:
The garage charges £30 an hour for labour. Many women do hard manual labour (=work with their hands). Workers withdrew their labour (=protested by stopping work) for twenty-four hours. ⇒
hard labour2. WORKERS [uncountable] all the people who work for a company or in a country:
a shortage of skilled labor We need to reduce our labour costs.3. BABY [singular, uncountable] the process of giving birth to a baby
in labour Meg was in labour for ten hours. Diane went into labour at 2 o'clock.a long/short/difficult labour The labour pains were unbearable.labour ward/room (=a room in a hospital where women give birth)4. a labour of love something that is hard work but that you do because you want to
5. sb’s labours formal a period of hard work:
After several hours' gardening, we sat down to admire the results of our labours. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
III. labour2 AC British English,
labor American English verb [intransitive] [
Word Family: noun:
labour,
labourer;
verb:
labour]
1. to work hard:
They laboured all day in the mills.labour over I’ve been labouring over this report all morning.labour to do something Ray had little talent but labored to acquire the skills of a writer.2. labour under a delusion/misconception/misapprehension etc to believe something that is not true:
She had laboured under the misconception that Bella liked her.3. labour the point to describe or explain something in too much detail or when people have already understood it
4. [always + adverb/preposition] to move slowly and with difficulty:
I could see the bus labouring up the steep, windy road. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲