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6 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
toil
/ˈtɔɪ(ə)l/
辛苦,苦工,網,羅網,圈套(
vi
.)苦幹,跋涉
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Toil
n.
Labor
with
pain
and
fatigue
;
labor
that
oppresses
the
body
or
mind
,
esp
.
the
body
.
My
task
of
servile
toil
.
--
Milton
.
After
such
bloody
toil
,
we
bid
good
night
.
--
Shak
.
Note:
☞
Toil
is
used
in
the
formation
of
compounds
which
are
generally
of
obvious
signification
;
as
,
toil
-strung,
toil
-wasted,
toil
-worn,
and
the
like
.
Syn:
--
Labor
;
drudgery
;
work
;
exertion
;
occupation
;
employment
;
task
;
travail
.
Usage:
--
Toil
,
Labor
,
Drudgery
.
Labor
implies
strenuous
exertion
,
but
not
necessary
such
as
overtasks
the
faculties
;
toil
denotes
a
severity
of
labor
which
is
painful
and
exhausting
;
drudgery
implies
mean
and
degrading
work
,
or
,
at
least
,
work
which
wearies
or
disgusts
from
its
minuteness
or
dull
uniformity
.
You
do
not
know
the
heavy
grievances
,
The
toils
,
the
labors
,
weary
drudgeries
,
Which
they
impose
. --
Southern
.
How
often
have
I
blessed
the
coming
day
,
When
toil
remitting
lent
its
turn
to
play
. --
Goldsmith
.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Toil
n.
A
net
or
snare
;
any
thread
,
web
,
or
string
spread
for
taking
prey
; --
usually
in
the
plural
.
As
a
Numidian
lion
,
when
first
caught
,
Endures
the
toil
that
holds
him
. --
Denham
.
Then
toils
for
beasts
,
and
lime
for
birds
,
were
found
.
--
Dryden
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Toil
,
v. i.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Toiled
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Toiling
.]
To
exert
strength
with
pain
and
fatigue
of
body
or
mind
,
especially
of
the
body
,
with
efforts
of
some
continuance
or
duration
;
to
labor
;
to
work
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Toil
,
v. t.
1.
To
weary
;
to
overlabor
. [
Obs
.]
“
Toiled
with
works
of
war.”
2.
To
labor
;
to
work
; --
often
with
out
. [
R
.]
Places
well
toiled
and
husbanded
.
--
Holland
.
[I]
toiled
out
my
uncouth
passage
.
--
Milton
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
toil
n
:
productive
work
(
especially
physical
work
done
for
wages
);
"
his
labor
did
not
require
a
great
deal
of
skill
" [
syn
:
labor
,
labour
]
v
:
work
hard
; "
She
was
digging
away
at
her
math
homework
";
"
Lexicographers
drudge
all
day
long
" [
syn
:
labor
,
labour
,
fag
,
travail
,
grind
,
drudge
,
dig
,
moil
]
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