中英
working-class
/ ˌwɜːkɪŋ ˈklɑːs /
/ ˌwɜːrkɪŋ ˈklæs /
  • 简明
  • 柯林斯
  • adj.工人阶级的;劳动阶级的
  • 网络释义
  • 专业释义
  • 英英释义
短语
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  • 双语例句
  • 原声例句
  • 权威例句
  • 1
    He came from an aspiring working-class background.
    他出身于有抱负的工人阶级家庭。
    《牛津词典》
  • 2
    The Warners were from a Jewish working-class background.
    沃纳一家人是犹太工人阶级出身。
    《柯林斯英汉双解大词典》
  • 3
    Working-class children are happier, more independent, complain less and are closer with family members.
    工人阶级的孩子更快乐、更独立、抱怨更少,与家人的关系也更亲密。
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  • 百科
  • Working-class

    The working class (also labouring class, proletariat, or laboring class) is the class of people employed for wages, especially in manual or industrial work. Working-class jobs include blue-collar jobs, but also include large amounts of white-collar and service work. The working class relies on earnings from wage labour, thereby including a large majority of the population in industrialized economies, of the urban areas of non-industrialized economies, and also a significant number of the rural workforce worldwide.In Marxist theory and socialist literature, working class is often used synonymously with the term proletariat, and includes all those who expend either mental or physical labor to produce economic value for those who own the means of production. It thus includes knowledge workers and white-collar workers who work for a salary. Since wages can be very low, and since the state of unemployment is by definition a lack of independent means of income generation and a lack of waged employment, the working class also includes the extremely poor and unemployed, which are sometimes called the lumpenproletariat.

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