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Dictionary
labouring
noun
The act of one who labours; toil; work done.
Exact(60)
Considering the parlous positions of the two Championship sides at the moment, it may be the only jollity available by the seaside this Saturday, and even then it does not seem a great idea to remind the currently labouring Wigan side of their fresh air and fun days in the Premier League.
Imagine caring for a family for days - the woman is labouring but her baby died days ago.
Payslips of workers labouring on the stadium in ferocious desert heat showed they earned as little as £4.90 a day.
Last week's news that the Greek economy would post almost no growth this year – while seeing its debt levels soar even further – at a time when the country was labouring under record levels of unemployment and poverty, offered indisputable proof that the medicine was simply wrong.
The academics' view is that the government is labouring under a "misconception" that it will right that historic bias and while not gerrymandering, it could be engineering a positive bias for the Conservatives.
While their husbands were out labouring all day in the fields or the fishing boats, the women of Juchitán took charge of trade, bartering and haggling with every foreigner who passed through this fortuitous bottleneck between the two continents of America.
Where are the Democrats in their avid middle years longing to play on a national stage, labouring now to lay the groundwork for a big run down the road?
Ms Jalal spells out too, without labouring it, how American worries about the cold war and then Islamist terrorism helped to give the army a free hand and many resources for controlling domestic affairs.Ms Fair's focus is on the army's "strategic culture", as she tries to explain why the generals behave as they do.
As well as facing a pile of debt, the group is labouring under a tax investigation.
But this blunts a valuable market signal, which is trying to tell college students that society would rather they become engineers than spend their first ten years out of college selling shoes and labouring over a permanently unfinished novel about a college graduate who doesn't have time to complete his novel because he is too busy selling shoes.
Critics complain that poor Kenyans are labouring long hours to produce salads for lazy Europeans.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com