Digger in a sentence as a noun

I am going to dig through the code like a gold digger. Thanks!

What if you're a ditch-digger, and now can't afford your staple food?

You'd be a good ditch digger&;&." that still sits in the back of my mind reminding me constantly that some goals just aren't achievable...

What, is this author using "digger" to mean "excavator", or something?

>>I find it shocking that there are people that think that a woman wanting financial security makes that woman a 'gold-digger'. Is it?

>So the world is filled with gold-diggers? No. Not true. Wanting a mate who is financially secure doesn't make a woman a gold digger.

A ditch digger rents his body out at work in exchange for money. When he buys shoes, the money is simply they conveyance of the value from digging the ditch to the person selling the shoes.

I find it shocking that there are people that think that a woman wanting financial security makes that woman a 'gold-digger'.

Not that every potential spouse is a "gold digger" but the people who are inclined to be one come out of the wood work apparently. It can be a very sad thing, being lonely and knowing how that makes you a target.

And even if I did, what point would there be for me in building an excavator or a digger or motorcar that used the levers and pneumatics/hydraulics I was learning about with my lego? What purpose would I use the machine for?

I've often wondered why they don't send a dragline digger to Mars, so they can dig a decent trench. When Spirit's wheel broke and they started dragging it along, digging a little trench, they made a nice discovery and that was with something not designed to dig at all.

This same thought occurred to me, surely rather than wasting the whole digger, there must be some salvageable parts that can be easily carried or hoisted out of the holes and sold as spares?

For one thing a used digger would be worth far more than $10,000 USD, and for another there are strict building codes that must be met. I'm sure a used digger would not be considered legal fill-dirt material and they would be forced to dig it out and re-do the whole lot if it was buried in place.

You can pay for this digger in an hour, by spending that hour sitting on your ***, and it's not that you will be re-spending that money in your lifetime anyway. Fill it in or have someone salvage it, do whichever is quicker: you've got other things to do with your life and one of those things is to enjoy your new pool.

, they only demonstrate to a gold digger how much wealth she will be able to extort in the future. Besides, gold diggers will generally enjoy diamonds purely as a status symbol and will generally waste your money on dumb **** that's more similar to diamonds than, say, mutual funds.

>I never really like these comparison though because why is a ditch digger better or worse than a computer programmer? Both hold basically the same desires. Why should one's misfortune be less important than another? They both work just as hard? No, they don't. And they don't get the same compensation either. Or job satisfaction -- the ditch digger pretty much works that job because he has to support himself / his family and he doesn't have the means to get something different.

Digger definitions

noun

a laborer who digs

noun

a machine for excavating

See also: excavator shovel