job
1557, in phrase jobbe of worke "piece of work" (contrasted with continuous labor), perhaps a variant of gobbe "mass, lump" (c.1400, see gob). Sense of "work done for pay" first recorded 1660. Slang meaning "specimen, thing, person" is from 1927. The verb is attested from 1670. On the job "hard at work" is from 1882. Jobber "one who does odd jobs" is from 1706. Job lot is from obsolete sense of "cartload, lump," which may also be ult. from gob.
Source: http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=job
The word "Job" comes from the Hebrew name "Iyov," which is the central figure in the Book of Job in the Hebrew Bible. The precise origin of the Hebrew name is not definitively known.
"Varuka" is the Malayalam word for 'come'.
German words for "good job"
The word thermos come from Greece
The future tense of "come" is "will come."
Some words that can come after the word 'house' are:houseboathousecathousecoathouseboundhouseflyhousefulhouseholdhousehusbandhousemanhousematehousepesthouseplanthousetophousewareshousewifehousework
It is spanish and means "I work" or "job"
The word gargoyle is from the old french word gargouille meaning throat(their job is to spit out the water from roofs).
The German Word for "Job" Is Arbeit but it can be Said Job to.
A better word for job would be occupation.
The word job has one syllable.
the other word of "did the job" is that worked that business,,,,,
The Hebrew word for job is either tafkíd (תפקיד) or avodá (עבודה). Israelis also use the English word "job", spelled ג׳וב.
I cannot think of 1 word, but the sayings 'going above and beyond the call of duty' or 'going the extra mile' come to mind.
Job hunting, job exploration, job finding.
Yes, the word "job" is a noun. A noun can be any of the following: a person, a place, a thing, an animal, an event, or an idea. The word "job" falls under the category of "a thing". Therefore, "job" is a noun.
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