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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Laboring

Labor \La"bor\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Labored; p. pr. & vb. n. Laboring.] [OE. labouren, F. labourer, L. laborare. See Labor, n.] [Written also labour.]

  1. To exert muscular strength; to exert one's strength with painful effort, particularly in servile occupations; to work; to toil.

    Adam, well may we labor still to dress This garden.
    --Milton.

  2. To exert one's powers of mind in the prosecution of any design; to strive; to take pains.

  3. To be oppressed with difficulties or disease; to do one's work under conditions which make it especially hard, wearisome; to move slowly, as against opposition, or under a burden; to be burdened; -- often with under, and formerly with of.

    The stone that labors up the hill.
    --Granville.

    The line too labors, and the words move slow.
    --Pope.

    To cure the disorder under which he labored.
    --Sir W. Scott.

    Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
    --Matt. xi. 28

  4. To be in travail; to suffer the pangs of childbirth; to be in labor.

  5. (Naut.) To pitch or roll heavily, as a ship in a turbulent sea.
    --Totten.

Laboring

Laboring \La"bor*ing\, a.

  1. That labors; performing labor; esp., performing coarse, heavy work, not requiring skill also, set apart for labor; as, laboring days.

    The sleep of a laboring man is sweet.
    --Eccl. v. 1

  2. 2. Suffering pain or grief.
    --Pope.

    Laboring oar, the oar which requires most strength and exertion; often used figuratively; as, to have, or pull, the laboring oar in some difficult undertaking.

Wiktionary
laboring

alt. (context US English) (present participle of labor English) n. The act of one who labors; toil; work done. vb. (context US English) (present participle of labor English)

WordNet
laboring

adj. doing arduous or unpleasant work; "drudging peasants"; "the bent backs of laboring slaves picking cotton"; "toiling coal miners in the black deeps" [syn: drudging, labouring, toiling]

Usage examples of "laboring".

When we reflect that these six volumes were produced between April, 1844, and December, 1850, by a young man of feeble constitution, who commenced life as a clerk in a mercantile establishment, and who spent much of his time during these six years in delivering public lectures, and laboring in the National Assembly, to which he was chosen in 1848, our admiration for such industry is only modified by the thought that if he had been more saving of his strength, he might have rendered even greater services to his country and to mankind.

Then, far from laboring to excite them against one another, let us strive to bring them together.

Does not even the weakest writer devote himself to the well-being of the laboring classes?

They enrich us, it is true, but our wealth places us in a position to expend more, to extend our establishments, and falls like refreshing dew upon the laboring classes.

The immediately social dimension of the exploitation of living immaterial labor immerses labor in all the relational elements that define the social but also at the same time activate the critical elements that develop the potential of insubordination and revolt through the entire set of laboring practices.

One of the most serious shortcomings has thus been the tendency among these authors to treat the new laboring practices in biopolitical society only in their intellectual and incorporeal aspects.

Class struggle moved across this terrain, marshaling up in the genesis of capitalism the creativity of the new mode of laboring and the new order of exploitation within a logic that carries together signs of both progress and reaction.

What is needed is for the state, which is minimal but effective, to make the well-being of private individuals coincide with the public interest, reducing all social functions and laboring activities to one measure of value.

Tools have always functioned as human prostheses, integrated into our bodies through our laboring practices as a kind of anthropological mutation both in individual terms and in terms of collective social life.

The convergence of struggles posed on an international scale the problem of transforming laboring cooperation into revolutionary organization and actualizing the virtual political unity.

Moreover, the creativity and conflictuality of the proletariat resided also, and perhaps more important, in the laboring populations outside the factories.

In the period of crisis, throughout the 1960s and 1970s, the expansion of welfare and the universalization of discipline in both the dominant and the subordinate countries created a new margin of freedom for the laboring multitude.

The increasingly extensive use of computers has tended progressively to redefine laboring practices and relations, along with, indeed, all social practices and relations.

Today we increasingly think like computers, while communication technologies and their model of interaction are becoming more and more central to laboring activities.

The computer and communication revolution of production has transformed laboring practices in such a way that they all tend toward the model of inf ormation and communication technologies.