Laborer in a sentence as a noun

Concerned 3rd party gets hired on as a\n day laborer, cutting said husband's grass.

If a person's parents were laborers, they became laborers - that was their caste.

The average salary for a laborer in a month is around $600, which is around $3 an hour.

If I was a hard working immigrant laborer perhaps I would say she was lazy and shallow.

In the eyes of the big companies, the laborers are just disposable people, there's always more from where they came from.

When you can't find enough wage laborers to man your factories, just pass laws enclosing the commons and kicking peasants off their land!

You compare the working conditions of the laborer in china with the laborer in the US and bemoan the conditions.

In fact, once you've got people out of self-sufficient lifestyles, the whole cycle runs itself: laborers require money wages merely to subsist!

It's very easy to beThis is a government that charges fines from their red light cameras in excess of a year of a laborer's salary.

Someone who is a computer programmer might be able to work for a long time and in many places, but a skilled laborer is more limited in their options.

It sounds like you're suggesting that for any costly responsibility placed on employers, there will always be a laborer willing to work without it.

There is simply no way to afford a Tesla as an average, middle-class laborer without making massive tradeoffs in quality of life elsewhere.

A typical laborer works 48 hours a week and is expected to change schedules as the needs changes, often working more than these 48 hours sometimes pulling up to 60 hours a week or even more.

"[1] Even this definition carries nasty background assumptions, namely: a class division between the laborer and the capitalist.

The light makes more business possible on the far end of town, and drives down the plant's shipping costs a little, leading to a buck fifty more on the quarterly bonus the laborer a got later that year.

>" I'm much more concerned about the uneducated person who works as a day laborer and doesn't have the opportunity to pursue a career that might result in a secure retirement.

> anti-exploitation of developing countriesNo problem with your other points, but if you have the chance, ask some exploited laborer in a developing country if he would like you to stop exploiting him.

And the truly unskilled laborer of yesterday, who contributed only his brawn, has become the semi-skilled machine operator of todaya man of higher skill and education, producing more wealth, earning a vastly higher standard of living.

And yet, foolish as it turned out to be, it still payed many thousands a wage for a few years, fueling nearby industries with displaced highly skilled laborers now without a job, and apparently local wineries can make use of the stupefyingly expensive tunnels.

And the greatest problem is that the gap between an unskilled laborer vs. a creative service-sector "innovator" is so disparate, that no possibility for retraining exists for the vast majority of the recently-made-redundant.

It's one of the best paid professions here, very flexible hours and working Monday to Friday and the pay is 4 times greater than that of an industry laborer and even then that's less than a junior level engineer would earn, all you need to know is how to speak English and learn some web development.

You think the day laborer standing outside Lowe's hoping for a job has chosen to be below the poverty line, and instead has chosen a life of leisure?I'm going to state this in the most civil way I know how: you are sorely lacking in perspective - and this is after reading all of your posts in this thread so far - and for your own sake, and the sake of people you share this society with, go volunteer at a poverty or homelessness-related organization for a month.

Laborer definitions

noun

someone who works with their hands; someone engaged in manual labor

See also: labourer jack