Sanakirja
Tekoälykääntäjä

Vaihtoehtoiset kirjoitusmuodot

Ääntäminen

  • ÄäntäminenUK:
    • IPA: /ˈwɜːk/
  • ÄäntäminenUS:
  • Geordie:
KäännösKontekstiÄäninäyte
Verbit
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
  • Ääntäminen
6.
7.
8.puhekieli
9.
10.puhekieli
11.
12.
13.
14.
andar {m}
15.
16.
Substantiivit
17.
obra {f}
18.
19.
curro {m}
puhekieli
20.
pega {f}
puhekieli, Ecuadorin espanja, Perun espanja, Kolumbian espanja, Bolivian espanja
21.
22.
laburo {m}
puhekieli
23.
24.fysiikka
25.
labor {f}
26.
obras {f}
27.
28.
29.
tanda {f}

Määritelmät

Substantiivit

  1. (heading, uncountable) Employment.
  2. Labour, occupation, job.
  3. The place where one is employed.
  4. (heading, uncountable) Effort.
  5. Effort expended on a particular task.
  6. Sustained human effort to overcome obstacles and achieve a result.
  7. (physics) A measure of energy expended in moving an object; most commonly, force times distance. No work is done if the object does not move.
  8. (thermodynamics) A nonthermal First Law energy in transit between one form or repository and another. Also, a means of accomplishing such transit..
  9. Sustained effort to achieve a goal or result, especially overcoming obstacles.
  10. (heading) Product; the result of effort.
  11. (uncountable, often, in combination ) The result of a particular manner of production.
  12. (uncountable, often, in combination) Something produced using the specified material or tool.
  13. (countable) A literary, artistic, or intellectual production.
  14. (countable) A fortification.
  15. (uncountable, slang, professional wrestling) The staging of events to appear as real.
  16. (mining) Ore before it is dressed.

Verbit

  1. (intransitive) To do a specific task by employing physical or mental powers.
  2. Followed by in (or at, etc.) Said of one's workplace (building), or one's department, or one's trade (sphere of business).
  3. Followed by as. Said of one's job title
  4. Followed by for. Said of a company or individual who employs.
  5. Followed by with. General use, said of either fellow employees or instruments or clients.
  6. (transitive) To effect by gradual degrees.
  7. (transitive) To embroider with thread.
  8. (transitive) To set into action.
  9. (transitive) To cause to ferment.
  10. (intransitive) To ferment.
  11. (transitive) To exhaust, by working.
  12. (transitive) To shape, form, or improve a material.
  13. (transitive) To operate in a certain place, area, or speciality.
  14. (transitive) To operate in or through; as, to work the phones.
  15. (transitive) To provoke or excite; to influence.
  16. (transitive) To use or manipulate to one’s advantage.
  17. (transitive) To cause to happen or to occur as a consequence.
  18. (transitive) To cause to work.
  19. (intransitive) To function correctly; to act as intended; to achieve the goal designed for.
  20. (intransitive, figuratively) To influence.
  21. (intransitive) To effect by gradual degrees; as, to work into the earth.
  22. (intransitive) To move in an agitated manner.
  23. (intransitive) To behave in a certain way when handled;
  24. (transitive, with two objects, poetic) To cause (someone) to feel (something).
  25. (obsolete, intransitive) To hurt; to ache.

Esimerkit

  • I cannot work a miracle.
  • she works for Microsoft;  he works for the president
  • I work closely with my Canadian counterparts;  you work with computers;  she works with the homeless people from the suburbs
  • he worked his way through the crowd;  the dye worked its way through;  using some tweezers, she worked the bee sting out of her hand
  • So the pure, limpid stream, when foul with stains / Of rushing torrents and descending rains, / Works itself clear, and as it runs, refines, / Till by degrees the floating mirror shines.
  • He worked the levers.
  • the working of beer when the barm is put in
  • the mine was worked until the last scrap of ore had been extracted.
  • He used pliers to work the wire into shape.
  • she works the night clubs;  the salesman works the Midwest;  this artist works mostly in acrylics
  • The rock musician worked the crowd of young girls into a frenzy.
  • She knows how to work the system.
  • I work as a cleaner.
  • He is working his servants hard.
  • The dirty secret of the internet is that all this distraction and interruption is immensely profitable. Web companies like to boast about[...]and so on. But the real way to build a successful online business is to be better than your rivals at undermining people's control of their own attention. Partly, this is a result of how online advertising has traditionally worked: advertisers pay for clicks, and a click is a click, however it's obtained.
  • he pointed at the car and asked, "Does it work"?;  he looked at the bottle of pain pills, wondering if they would work;  my plan didn’t work
  • They worked on her to join the group.
  • His fingers worked with tension.
  • A ship works in a heavy sea.
  • confused with working sands and rolling waves
  • this dough does not work easily;  the soft metal works well
  • So sad it seemed, and its cheek-bones gleamed, and its fingers flicked the shore; / And it lapped and lay in a weary way, and its hands met to implore; / That I gently said: “Poor, restless dead, I would never work you woe; / Though the wrong you rue you can ne’er undo, I forgave you long ago.”
  • ‘I wolde hit were so,’ seyde the Kynge, ‘but I may nat stonde, my hede worchys so—’
  • There's a lot of guesswork involved.
  • Come on, Nerissa; I have work in hand / That you yet know not of.
  • In every work that he began[...]he did it with all his heart, and prospered.
  • Edward Churchill still attended to his work in a hopeless mechanical manner like a sleep-walker who walks safely on a well-known round. But his Roman collar galled him, his cossack stifled him, his biretta was as uncomfortable as a merry-andrew's cap and bells.
  • He hasn’t come home yet, he’s still at work.
  • Holding a brick over your head is hard work.  It takes a lot of work to write a dictionary.
  • We know what we must do. Let's go to work.
  • Work is done against friction to drag a bag along the ground.
  • Turbines have been around for a long time—windmills and water wheels are early examples. The name comes from the Latin turbo, meaning "vortex", and thus the defining property of a turbine is that a fluid or gas turns the blades of a rotor, which is attached to a shaft that can perform useful work.
  • We don't have much time. Let's get to work piling up those sandbags.
  • The Bat—they called him the Bat. Like a bat he chose the night hours for his work of rapine; like a bat he struck and vanished, pouncingly, noiselessly; like a bat he never showed himself to the face of the day.
  • My work involves a lot of travel.
  • We've got some paperwork to do before we can get started.  The piece was decorated with intricate filigree work.
  • It is a work of art.
  • the poetic works of Alexander Pope
  • to leave no rubs or blotches in the work
  • The work some praise, / And some the architect.
  • “[…] We are engaged in a great work, a treatise on our river fortifications, perhaps? But since when did army officers afford the luxury of amanuenses in this simple republic?[...]”
  • William the Conqueror fortified many castles, throwing up new ramparts, bastions and all manner of works.
  • I work in a national park;  she works in the human resources department;  he mostly works in logging, but sometimes works in carpentry
  • He’s working in a bar.
  • This time was most dreadful for Lilian. Thrown on her own resources and almost penniless, she maintained herself and paid the rent of a wretched room near the hospital by working as a charwoman, sempstress, anything.

Taivutusmuodot

Partisiipin perfektiworkedPartisiipin perfektiwrought (harvinainen)
Partisiipin perfektiywrought (vanhahtava)Imperfektiworked
Imperfektiwrought (harvinainen)Partisiipin preesensworking
MonikkoworksYksikön kolmannen persoonan indikatiivin preesensworks
Yksikön kolmannen persoonan indikatiivin preesensworketh (vanhahtava)