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A Writer's Dictionary:

work something out Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with W » woolshed ... working party » work something out


work
noun
    1. Physical or mental effort made in order to achieve or make something, eg labour, study, research, etc.
    2. Employment.
      Example: out of work
      Thesaurus: occupation, profession, job, vocation, line, calling, employment, craft, trade, business, skill, avocation, pursuit.
    3. One's place of employment.
      Example: He leaves work at 4.30
    4. Tasks to be done. Also in compounds.
      Example: She often brings work home with her
      Example: housework
      Thesaurus: jobs, tasks, chores, assignments, projects, commitments, duties, obligations.
    5. The product of mental or physical labour.
      Example: His work has improved
      Example: a lifetime's work
      Thesaurus: performance, handiwork, output, endeavour, production.
    6. A manner of working, or workmanship.
    7a. Any literary, artistic, musical, or dramatic composition or creation;
    7b. The entire collection of such material by an artist, composer or author, etc.
      Form: works
    8. Anything done, managed, made or achieved, etc; an activity carried out for some purpose.
      Example: works of charity
    9. old use
      Needlework.
    10. Things made in the material or with the tools specified; the production of such things.
      Example: basketwork
    11. The parts of a building, etc using a specified material.
      Example: stonework
    12. Building or repair operations.
      Example: roadworks
      Form: works
    13. A rampart or defense.
      Example: earthworks
      Form: works
    14. colloq
      The operating parts of eg a watch or machine; the mechanism.
      Thesaurus: parts, cogs, wheels, gears, pistons, springs, coils, chains, rods, pulleys, wires.
      Form: works
    15. The place of manufacture of a specified product.
      Example: gasworks
      Form: works
    16. colloq
      Everything possible, available or going; the whole lot
      Example: She has a headache, fever, cold ― the works!
      Thesaurus: everything, all, totality, entirety, the whole, the whole shebang.
      Form: the works
    17. physics.
      The transfer of energy that occurs when force is exerted on a body to move it, measured in joules.
adj
    1. Relating to, or suitable for, etc work.
      Example: work clothes
verb worked, working
    intr
    1. To do work; to exert oneself mentally or physically; to toil, labour or study.
      Thesaurus: labour, toil, do; slave, sweat, punch a time clock (US slang), work one's fingers to the bone, buckle down, work like a horse, work like a dog, put one's nose to the grindstone.
    tr & intr
    2. To be employed or have a job.
    3. To impose tasks on someone; to make them labour.
      Example: She works her staff hard
    tr & intr
    4. To operate, especially satisfactorily
      Example: Does this radio work?
      Thesaurus: function, go, run, serve, operate.
    intr
    5. Said of a plan or idea, etc: to be successful or effective.
    intr
    6. To function in a particular way.
      Example: That's not how life works
    intr
    7. Said of a craftsman: to specialize in the use of a specified material.
      Example: He works in brass
    8. To shape or fashion (metals or other materials); to make by doing this.
      Example: earrings worked in silver
    9. To cultivate (land).
    10. To extract materials from (a mine).
    11. To knead (eg dough).
    12. To cover (an area) as a salesman, etc.
    13. To sew or embroider, etc.
    14. To achieve (miracles, wonders, etc).
      Thesaurus: accomplish, achieve, effect, manage.
    15. colloq
      To manipulate (a system or rules, etc) to one's advantage.
    tr & intr
    16. To make (one's way), or shift or make something shift gradually.
      Example: work one's way forward
      Example: worked the nail out of the wall
    intr
    17. Said eg of a screw: to become gradually (loose or free, etc).
    intr
    18. Said of the face or features: to move uncontrollably with emotion; to contort.
    19. To exercise (a part of the body).
    intr
    20. Said of a liquid: to ferment.
    21. To earn (one's sea passage) by unpaid work on board.
Derivative: workless
adj
    Idiom: all in a day's work
      Not being any more work or trouble than usual.
    Idiom: give someone the works
      colloq
      To use every measure available in dealing with them, by way of eg punishment, coercion or welcome.
    Idiom: have one's work cut out
      colloq
      To be faced with a challenging task.
    Idiom: make short work of something or someone
      To deal with it or them rapidly and effectively.
        Thesaurus: finish off, deal with, dispose of, prevent, stop, put paid to.
    Idiom: a ... piece (a ... bit of work)
      colloq
      A person, especially with regard to an unfavorable aspect of character or disposition.
        Example: He's a nasty piece of work
    Idiom: work to rule
      To reduce efficiency by working strictly to official working rules, especially as a form of industrial action.
    Etymology: Anglo-Saxon weorc.

    Phrasal Verb: work at something
      To apply oneself to it.
    Phrasal Verb: work in
      Said of workers protesting against closure or redundancy, etc: to occupy work premises and take over the running of the business. See also work-in.
    Phrasal Verb: work something in
      To add and mix (an ingredient) into a mixture.To find a place for it; to fit it in.
        Example: I'll work an appointment in somehow
    Phrasal Verb: work something off
      To get rid of (energy or the effects of a heavy meal) by energetic activity.
    Phrasal Verb: work on someone
      To use one's powers of persuasion on them.
    Phrasal Verb: work on something
      To try to perfect or improve it.To use it as a basis for one's decisions and actions.
        Example: working on that assumption
    Phrasal Verb: work out
      To be successfully achieved or resolved.
        Example: It'll all work out in the end
      To perform a set of energetic physical exercises. See also workout.
        Example: She's working out at the gym
    Phrasal Verb: work something out
      To solve it; to sort or reason it out.
    Phrasal Verb: work someone over
      To beat them up.
    Phrasal Verb: work someone up
      To excite or agitate them.
    Phrasal Verb: work something up
      To summon up (an appetite, enthusiasm or energy, etc).
    Phrasal Verb: work up to something
      To approach (a difficult task or objective) by gradual stages.


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