laborious
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025
toil•some
(toil′səm),USA pronunciation adj.
toil′some•ly, adv.
toil′some•ness, n.
- characterized by or involving toil;
laborious or fatiguing.
- toil1 + -some1 1575–85
toil′some•ness, n.
- wearisome, arduous, strenuous, tiring.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
toil1 /tɔɪl/USA pronunciation
n. [uncountable]
v. [no object]
toil•some, adj.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025- hard or exhausting work.
v. [no object]
- to work or labor with great difficulty:to toil on the project night and day.
- to move with great effort:to toil up a hill.
toil•some, adj.
toil1 (toil),USA pronunciation
n.
v.i.
v.t.
toil′er, n.
toil2 (toil),USA pronunciationn.
- hard and continuous work;
exhausting labor or effort. - a laborious task.
- [Archaic.]battle;
strife;
struggle.
v.i.
- to engage in hard and continuous work;
labor arduously:to toil in the fields. - to move or travel with difficulty, weariness, or pain.
v.t.
- to accomplish or produce by toil.
- Latin tudiculāre to stir up, beat, verb, verbal derivative of tudicula machine for crushing olives, equivalent. to tudi- (stem of tundere to beat) + -cula -cule2
- Anglo-French toil contention, toiler to contend
- Middle English toile (noun, nominal), toilen (verb, verbal) 1250–1300
- 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged exertion, travail, pains. See work.
- 4.See corresponding entry in Unabridged strive, moil.
- 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged indolence, sloth.
toil2 (toil),USA pronunciation
- Usually, toils. a net or series of nets in which game known to be in the area is trapped or into which game outside of the area is driven.
- Usually, toils. trap;
snare:to be caught in the toils of a gigantic criminal conspiracy. - [Archaic.]any snare or trap for wild beasts.
- Latin tēla web
- French toile
- 1520–30
'toilsome' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):