ELBOW GREASE vs SWEAT: NOUN
- A colloquial or humorous expression for energetic hand-labor, as in rubbing, scouring, etc.
- Effort or hard work, especially physical work involving repeated motion of the forearm, such as scrubbing.
- Use of physical or mental energy; hard work
- Strenuous physical labor and effort.
- A spontaneous fermentation of the tobacco leaf corresponding to the aging of wines. Where the ordinary sweating process has not been fully carried through this is intentionally maintained. See sweating, 5.
- 10. Same as chuck-luck or chucker-luck.
- Condensation of moisture on a cold surface
- Salty fluid secreted by sweat glands
- Agitation resulting from active worry
- Use of physical or mental energy; hard work
- In tobacco manufacturing See sweating
- A sweatsuit.
- An anxious, fretful condition.
- A run given to a horse as exercise before a race.
- Strenuous labor or exertion.
- A condition or instance of sweating.
- The process of sweating.
- Condensation of moisture in the form of droplets on a surface.
- The colorless saline moisture excreted by the sweat glands; perspiration.
ELBOW GREASE vs SWEAT: VERB
- N/A
- Excrete perspiration through the pores in the skin
ELBOW GREASE vs SWEAT: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To make damp or wet with perspiration.
- To cause to perspire, as by drugs, heat, or strenuous exercise.
- To have (moisture) condense in small drops on a surface.
- To excrete (wastes) in perspiration.
- To excrete (moisture) through a porous surface, such as the skin.
- To fret or worry.
- To work long and hard.
- To ferment, as tobacco during curing.
- To release moisture, as hay in the swath.
- To collect moisture in small drops from the air, as a cold water pipe.
- To exude in droplets, as moisture from certain cheeses or sap from a tree.
- To excrete perspiration through the pores in the skin; perspire.
- To overwork and underpay (employees).
- To cause to work excessively; overwork.
- To interrogate (someone) under duress.
- To extract (information) from someone under duress.
- To join (metal parts) by interposing cold solder and then heating.
- To steam (vegetables or other food).
- To fret or worry about.
ELBOW GREASE vs SWEAT: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Use of physical or mental energy
- Hard work
- Hard work
- Use of physical or mental energy
- To work for starvation wages; also, to carry on work on the sweating or underpaying system.
- To labor under a burden as of punishment or extortion; suffer; pay a penalty.
- To toil; labor; drudge.
- To exude as or in the manner of perspiration.
- To exude moisture, as green plants piled in a heap; also, to gather moisture from the surrounding air by condensation: as, a new haymow sweats; the clay of newly made bricks sweats; a pitcher of ice-water sweats.
- To excrete sensible moisture from the skin, or as if from the skin; perspire; especially, to perspire excessively.
- (idiom) (no sweat) Easily done or handled.
- (idiom) (no sweat) Used to acknowledge an expression of gratitude.
- (idiom) (sweat blood) To worry intensely.
- (idiom) (sweat bullets) To sweat profusely.
- (idiom) (sweat bullets) To worry intensely.
- (idiom) (sweat blood) To work diligently or strenuously.
- (idiom) (sweat of (one's) brow) Hard work.
ELBOW GREASE vs SWEAT: RELATED WORDS
- Emery cloth, Zester, Forethought, Spackle, Sanding, Degrease, Yardwork, Perseverance, Scrape, Ingenuity, Legwork, Travail, Exertion, Effort, Sweat
- Toil, Swither, Sudor, Hidrosis, Effort, Travail, Stew, Diaphoresis, Fret, Water, Lather, Elbow grease, Exertion, Perspire, Perspiration
ELBOW GREASE vs SWEAT: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Scrubbing, Sprucing, Emery cloth, Zester, Forethought, Spackle, Sanding, Degrease, Perseverance, Scrape, Ingenuity, Legwork, Exertion, Effort, Sweat
- Shirt, Sweatshirt, Bile, Toil, Sudor, Hidrosis, Effort, Stew, Diaphoresis, Water, Lather, Elbow grease, Exertion, Perspire, Perspiration
ELBOW GREASE vs SWEAT: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Yes, you can do this by hand just requires some elbow grease.
- It may require more than one application and lots of elbow grease!
- Pressure Cooker Pot minutes with no elbow grease on your part.
- But good, old-fashioned elbow grease ended up doing the job.
- With some elbow grease you can get the rust off.
- Would make a great package tray with some elbow grease.
- Scraping the rough, overheating food can take some elbow grease.
- With a tiny bit of elbow grease, the right.
- Did you use some elbow grease in the punch?
- Ikea furniture without a lot of elbow grease.
- Evolutionarily speaking, the purpose of apocrine sweat glands was to produce sweat that could mark territories and act as a pheromone.
- When the body receives a signal that the sweat glands are full, sweat production decreases.
- The terms of compensation for sweat equity are legalized by a sweat equity agreement.
- Fundraising may want to value sweat equity agreements entered into compiling our terms here by continuing sweat template due.
- Apocrine sweat glands, which are associated with hair follicles, continuously secrete a fatty sweat into the gland tubule.
- Truly sweat proof technology specially designed to resist the corrosive properties of sweat.
- Lisa Wu with her kids Justin Sweat, Jordan Sweat and Edgerton Hartwell, Jr.
- Sweat; and a son, James Marvin Sweat III.
- Sweat Glands Sweat glands are also found in the dermis and produce a slightly acidic, watery fluid called sweat.
- When you sweat, your body releases sweat from your sweat glands to cool itself down.
ELBOW GREASE vs SWEAT: QUESTIONS
- N/A
- Does sweat gland morphology change in hyperhidrosis?
- Are Plantronics backbeat fit headphones sweat-proof?
- How much does sweat concentration affect conductivity?
- Do You Sweat about financial administrator interviews?
- Why you sweat vegetables and how to sweat vegetables properly?
- What type of sweat glands produce large amounts of sweat?
- How much sweat does the average person sweat in a day?
- What type of sweat do people with primary hyperhidrosis sweat from?
- Can I switch out Sweat Fest for sweat interval workouts?
- Does sweat stimulation methodology affect the composition of sweat?