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we work a 40-hour week

См. также в других словарях:

  • Forty-Hour Week Convention, 1935 — Infobox ILO convention code= C47 name= Forty Hour Week Convention, 1935 adopt= June 22, 1935 force= May 23, 1957 classify= Hours of Work subject= Working Time prev= Hours of Work (Coal Mines) Convention (Revised), 1935 next= Maintenance of… …   Wikipedia

  • week — [ wik ] noun count *** a period of seven days, usually counted from a Sunday: He travels south two days a week. That left 15 dollars per week for food. last/next week: He will meet his uncle in Boston next week. a. a week in which particular… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • week — [wēk] n. [ME weke < OE wicu with lengthened & lowered vowel, akin to Ger woche (OHG wohha) < IE * weig , to bend (see WEAK): basic sense “period of change”] 1. a period of seven days, esp. one beginning with Sunday and ending with Saturday… …   English World dictionary

  • week — [[t]wi͟ːk[/t]] ♦ weeks 1) N COUNT A week is a period of seven days. Some people consider that a week starts on Monday and ends on Sunday. I had a letter from my mother last week... This has been on my mind all week... I know a wonderful… …   English dictionary

  • week */*/*/ — UK [wiːk] / US [wɪk] noun [countable] Word forms week : singular week plural weeks a period of seven days, usually counted from a Sunday He travels south two days a week. That left ten pounds per week for food. last/next week: He will meet his… …   English dictionary

  • week*/*/*/ — [wiːk] noun [C] 1) a period of seven days, usually counted from a Sunday They spent two weeks in Florida.[/ex] He works from home two days a week.[/ex] He will meet his uncle in Geneva next week.[/ex] We re seeing Jim a week on Tuesday (= seven… …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • week — W1S1 [wi:k] n [: Old English; Origin: wicu] 1.) a period of seven days and nights, usually measured in Britain from Monday to Sunday and in the US from Sunday to Saturday once/twice/three times etc a week ▪ Letters were delivered twice a week… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • Work-life balance — The expression work life balance was first used in the late 1970s to describe the balance between an individual s work and personal life. (New Ways to Work and the Working Mother s Association in the United Kingdom). In the United States, this… …   Wikipedia

  • week — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ last, past ▪ previous ▪ coming, following, next ▪ consecutive, successive …   Collocations dictionary

  • hour — /aυə/ noun 1. a period of time lasting sixty minutes ♦ to work a thirty five hour week to work seven hours a day each weekday ♦ we work an eight hour day we work for eight hours a day, e.g. from 8.30 to 5.30 with one hour for lunch 2. sixty… …   Dictionary of banking and finance

  • work — ▪ I. work work 1 [wɜːk ǁ wɜːrk] verb 1. [intransitive] to do a job that you are paid for: • Harry is 78 and still working. • Most of the people I went to school with work in factories. work for • David works for a broadcasting company …   Financial and business terms

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