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 job [dʒɑb]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 工作, 零活, 职业, 事情

vi. 做零工, 打杂, 做股票经纪, 假公济私

vt. 代客买卖, 批发, 承包, 欺骗

[计] 作业

[化] 工件; 加工件; 职务

[经] 批, 批发, 工作




    job
    jobbed, jobbing
    [ noun ]
    1. the principal activity in your life that you do to earn money

    2. <noun.act>
      he's not in my line of business
    3. a specific piece of work required to be done as a duty or for a specific fee

    4. <noun.act>
      estimates of the city's loss on that job ranged as high as a million dollars
      the job of repairing the engine took several hours
      the endless task of classifying the samples
      the farmer's morning chores
    5. a workplace; as in the expression

    6. <noun.artifact>
      on the job
    7. an object worked on; a result produced by working

    8. <noun.artifact>
      he held the job in his left hand and worked on it with his right
    9. the responsibility to do something

    10. <noun.act>
      it is their job to print the truth
    11. the performance of a piece of work

    12. <noun.act>
      she did an outstanding job as Ophelia
      he gave it up as a bad job
    13. a damaging piece of work

    14. <noun.act>
      dry rot did the job of destroying the barn
      the barber did a real job on my hair
    15. a state of difficulty that needs to be resolved

    16. <noun.state>
      she and her husband are having problems
      it is always a job to contact him
      urban problems such as traffic congestion and smog
    17. a Jewish hero in the Old Testament who maintained his faith in God in spite of afflictions that tested him

    18. <noun.person>
    19. any long-suffering person who withstands affliction without despairing

    20. <noun.person>
    21. (computer science) a program application that may consist of several steps but is a single logical unit

    22. <noun.communication>
    23. a book in the Old Testament containing Job's pleas to God about his afflictions and God's reply

    24. <noun.communication>
    25. a crime (especially a robbery)

    26. <noun.act>
      the gang pulled off a bank job in St. Louis
    [ verb ]
    1. profit privately from public office and official business

    2. <verb.social>
    3. arranged for contracted work to be done by others

    4. <verb.social> farm out subcontract
    5. work occasionally

    6. <verb.social>
      As a student I jobbed during the semester breaks
    7. invest at a risk

    8. <verb.possession>
      speculate
      I bought this house not because I want to live in it but to sell it later at a good price, so I am speculating


    Job \Job\ (j[o^]b), n. [Prov. E. job, gob, n., a small piece of
    wood, v., to stab, strike; cf. E. gob, gobbet; perh.
    influenced by E. chop to cut off, to mince. See {Gob}.]
    1. A sudden thrust or stab; a jab.

    2. A piece of chance or occasional work; any definite work
    undertaken in gross for a fixed price; as, he did the job
    for a thousand dollars.

    3. A public transaction done for private profit; something
    performed ostensibly as a part of official duty, but
    really for private gain; a corrupt official business.

    4. Any affair or event which affects one, whether fortunately
    or unfortunately. [Colloq.]

    5. A situation or opportunity of work; as, he lost his job.
    [Colloq.]

    6. A task, or the execution of a task; as, Michelangelo did a
    great job on the David statue.
    [PJC]

    7. (Computers) A task or coordinated set of tasks for a
    multitasking computer, submitted for processing as a
    single unit, usually for execution in background. See {job
    control language}.
    [PJC]

    Note: Job is used adjectively to signify doing jobs, used for
    jobs, or let on hire to do jobs; as, job printer; job
    master; job horse; job wagon, etc.

    {By the job}, at a stipulated sum for the work, or for each
    piece of work done; -- distinguished from {time work}; as,
    the house was built by the job.

    {Job lot}, a quantity of goods, usually miscellaneous, sold
    out of the regular course of trade, at a certain price for
    the whole; as, these articles were included in a job lot.


    {Job master}, one who lest out horses and carriages for hire,
    as for family use. [Eng.]

    {Job printer}, one who does miscellaneous printing, esp.
    circulars, cards, billheads, etc.

    {Odd job}, miscellaneous work of a petty kind; occasional
    work, of various kinds, or for various people.

    {to do a job on}, to harm badly or destroy. [slang]

    {on the job}, alert; performing a responsibility well.
    [slang]
    [1913 Webster +PJC]


    Job \Job\ (j[o^]b), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Jobbed} (j[o^]bd); p.
    pr. & vb. n. {Jobbing}.]
    1. To strike or stab with a pointed instrument. --L'Estrange.

    2. To thrust in, as a pointed instrument. --Moxon.

    3. To do or cause to be done by separate portions or lots; to
    sublet (work); as, to job a contract.

    4. (Com.) To buy and sell, as a broker; to purchase of
    importers or manufacturers for the purpose of selling to
    retailers; as, to job goods.

    5. To hire or let by the job or for a period of service; as,
    to job a carriage. --Thackeray.


    Job \Job\, v. i.
    1. To do chance work for hire; to work by the piece; to do
    petty work.

    Authors of all work, to job for the season. --Moore.

    2. To seek private gain under pretense of public service; to
    turn public matters to private advantage.

    And judges job, and bishops bite the town. --Pope.

    3. To carry on the business of a jobber in merchandise or
    stocks.


    Job \Job\ (j[=o]b), n.
    The hero of the book of that name in the Old Testament; the
    prototypical patient man.

    {Job's comforter}.
    (a) A false friend; a tactless or malicious person who, under
    pretense of sympathy, insinuates rebukes.
    (b) A boil. [Colloq.]

    {Job's news}, bad news. --Carlyle.

    {Job's tears} (Bot.), a kind of grass ({Coix Lacryma}), with
    hard, shining, pearly grains.

    1. "He came up to me and said, `You tell Mickey Roache,' our police commissioner, `he's doing a wonderful job in that Stuart case and we're with him all the way,"' Flynn said.
    2. He does not know why he put on so much weight but said it forced him to quit his job and go on disability eight years ago.
    3. Martin, in Illinois on Friday, was informed only an hour ahead of the formal announcement that she had landed the job, an administration source said.
    4. That is the job of a high-powered task force that is now said to be thinking the unthinkable on this and other contentious issues at Lloyd's.
    5. That job, of course, is to bury inflation so deeply it cannot arise again for years.
    6. Now Texans will have a choice between one of their own for the top job or for No. 2, and they're likely to go for the big prize, he said.
    7. There is a shortage of clinics, hospitals and classrooms; two years ago, Benitez said, he quit his job teaching high school history because of unruly students.
    8. Beset by a troubled marriage and his son's ill health, Cisneros last fall said he wouldn't run again and accepted a job in the private sector.
    9. When Goodwin, the owner of Grandma's, counted up 50 job vacancies for this summer and only 12 applicants, he bought a $150,000 three-family home to house workers.
    10. Handwritten comments by Green's superiors in the margin of his reports praise his progress, saying "stay close to her" and "very good prospect." At one point, Green described his visits to Latta as a "cultivating job."
    11. Fitting the consultant to the problem is clearly as relevant as the employee to the job. Adrian Furnham is a Reader in Psychology at University College London and head of its Business Psychology Unit.
    12. Hours after accepting the job, he went to a Washington dinner party also attended by seven journalists.
    13. Santos says it's a full-time job to polish and buff the 2,400 pairs of shoes that Imelda left behind when she and her husband, Ferdinand Marcos, fled to Hawaii after the February 1986 uprising that toppled his administration.
    14. He's glad when the job is done, when he no longer is hanging in a sling seat 300 feet above ground.
    15. About 150 strikers at the 4,500-worker Repair Shipyard also vowed to stay off the job "to the end," they said.
    16. 'We should programme difficult things, special festival events. If we are doing our job well, drama will always be controversial.
    17. Expanding on this notion, Ms. Borden has asked: "What is so wrong with renting your body for two shifts a week, when the alternative is a 40-hour-a-week job that makes you so burned out all you can do is come home and watch TV at the end of the day?"
    18. It was a case of adapt or die, and the Catskills did a better job than areas like the Adirondack Mountains in upstate New York, said Dan Lee, travel industry analyst for the investment firm Drexel Burnham.
    19. The younger son's wife, a salaried employee at Boeing, remains on the job.
    20. Some job losses among blacks also resulted. Trade sanctions were probably less effective: merchandise exports held up remarkably well during the sanctions era.
    21. And of course, the Justice Department job, like the Iraqi pipeline Mr. Wallach also once advocated, never materialized.
    22. But Ms. Ingram argued that "Ruby Lewis did not perceive the plaintiff as having different skin color from she." She said the issue was Ms. Morrow's job performance.
    23. Some temporary workers were on the job by 1 a.m. Saturday, with 2,200 replacements reporting to work Monday morning, said Western Union spokesman Warren Bechtel.
    24. After Norquist was sworn in, Maier wished his successor good luck. "I know you have the courage and vision to do the job," Maier said.
    25. Lurie's family was given exit visas in 1979, but the authorites revoked them on the grounds of state secrecy because her husband worked in a classified job as a organic chemistry researcher for two years in the 1960s, she said.
    26. The press in general does a good job reporting on the foibles and the gaffes and the slips of a president.
    27. Convinced by Ohio Republicans that Mr. Blackwell was the man to beat Charles Luken, Washington party officials recruited the HUD official for the job.
    28. Then they spent $1 million in seven days, and got the job done with less than 24 hours to spare.
    29. Works councils at Fiat's Italian vehicle plants have endorsed overwhelmingly a complex government-sponsored agreement avoiding large job losses.
    30. Many like knowing where their kids are and believe strongly that a job, even if it is only flipping hamburgers at a fast-food joint, builds character and teaches good work habits.
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