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drudgery

[druhj-uh-ree] / ˈdrʌdʒ ə ri /


Usage

What are other ways to say drudgery?

Drudgery suggests continuous, dreary, and dispiriting work, especially of a menial or servile kind: the drudgery of household tasks. Labor particularly denotes hard manual work: backbreaking labor; arduous labor. Toil suggests wearying or exhausting labor: toil that breaks down the worker's health. Work is the general word and may apply to exertion that is either easy or hard: fun work; heavy work. 


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

‘Dear Tryphosa,’ she whispered to herself with a smile, ‘you little thought, when you gave me that new beatitude, what constant friends the grey angel of Drudgery and I were to be.’

From A Princess in Calico by Black, Edith Ferguson

Dull Drudgery, driven on, by clerks with the cold dastard spurt of their pen, has been driven—into a Communion of Drudges!

From The French Revolution by Carlyle, Thomas

Drudgery has so largely been removed that it is probably true that there is no more “hack-work” or dull routine in agriculture than in other lines of business.

From The Challenge of the Country A Study of Country Life Opportunity by Fiske, George Walter

Drudgery, commonplaceness is in the spirit, not the work.

From Quiet Talks about Jesus by Gordon, S. D. (Samuel Dickey)

Less Solitary More Comfortable More Attractive Freer from Drudgery Happier and Fuller of Opportunity For the 21,000,000 girls and women on the farms and in the villages!

From The American Country Girl by Crow, Martha Foote




Vocabulary lists containing drudgery


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