He is a Dalit, a member of a lowly caste that traditionally performed the most menial tasks in Indian society. |
|
As incomes rise and the opportunity cost of performing menial labor changes, fewer people will want to work as servants. |
|
The wise magician then ordered the young prince to spend the day lugging and stacking a pile of huge logs, menial labor unbefitting royalty. |
|
I ran menial errands, tasted everything, and feigned indifference towards the whole process. |
|
Domestic helpers are usually associated with menial jobs and household chores. |
|
As a menial, I was never told who these men were, never introduced to them, but I assumed they were the backers who had money at risk. |
|
I never forgot where I'd come from, and I was never too good that I couldn't get my hands dirty and do menial jobs. |
|
Nor were we happy with how some of the churches educated, when they seemed to train the young primarily for menial pursuits such as domestics. |
|
Owen lowered his gaze as they passed the two guards posted nearby and adopted the attitude of a menial servant busy running an errand. |
|
Starting by doing menial tasks teaches people respect for others and also earns their respect. |
|
That means his mission commander can ask him to clean the air filters, unload some equipment, or take care of other menial tasks. |
|
In the eleventh century the Norse kings probably had an immediate retinue of about ninety men, excluding menial servants and hangers on. |
|
Inexpensive areas to live are not, as some sophisticates on the coast suppose, attractive only to dullards and menial workers. |
|
In any event, it couldn't have helped me, and I continue to pay the rent with menial office work and a few freelance writing gigs. |
|
To get by and earn at least some money, many are forced into degrading and menial work. |
|
These days, there is too much competition for menial work and too few opportunities. |
|
All menial tasks like cleaning in temples and private households were undertaken by bondmaids whose position was not high in the society. |
|
Cheng said they would often look for menial work in restaurants or labouring work around the city. |
|
All he wanted was to sit alone and perform the menial, unthinking actions necessary to remain breathing. |
|
On arrival, he found himself in a labour camp, being forced to do menial and unskilled work. |
|
|
Life for most was dull and without pleasantries, simply killing time with menial tasks. |
|
They will be allowed to perform menial tasks that require no skill whatsoever. |
|
Most of them have done menial work throughout their student life to help see them through university. |
|
My brain must be shrinking the longer I spend here, because I seem to derive great happiness and satisfaction from menial tasks. |
|
Reily's informants were unskilled labourers, employed in low-status, poorly paid, menial jobs. |
|
Most worked in Mediterranean Europe as household servants, hospital orderlies, garbage collectors, or in similar menial positions. |
|
In Kabul, they usually have low-paying, menial jobs such as janitorial work. |
|
If your addled brain cannot focus on the real work at hand, busy yourself with menial tasks like cleaning, filing and arranging. |
|
The immigrant population occupies most of the menial and less remunerative forms of employment which Venezuelans themselves avoid. |
|
He performed menial duties in return for instruction with poor board and lodging. |
|
Many refugees who were professionals in their countries now find themselves performing menial tasks or manual labor. |
|
A further group of craftsmen carried out the more menial tasks of glass cutting, firing, leading, and fixing of the windows. |
|
His daily duties entailed preparing vegetables, doing the dishes and the other menial tasks that no one else wanted. |
|
He busied himself, sweeping the visitor's quarters, washing their clothes and helping with the most menial work in fields. |
|
Approach everything menial as something special and it need never be menial again. |
|
The nearest university is a six to eight hours drive, so many of the children go on to work in a nearby factory doing menial labour. |
|
As time marched on, Suzie sat at her desk and performed her menial task as menially as she could, and because of this, her writing changed. |
|
Food and shelter are the greatest problems, and many children have lost families or work at menial tasks to provide meager, subsistence-level support. |
|
In fact, a good number of people are considering them vital to a healthy post-industrial economy, as they take the lowest-paid and most menial jobs. |
|
I liked the high level of spice, but the menial amount of the fresh ingredients that could have really perked up this tall pile of crunchiness, were too few and far between. |
|
|
But the majority of menial workers and derelicts are, going by empirical evidence, first or second-generation immigrants with little in the way of hopes or prospects. |
|
Du Bois discovered that the vast majority of black American soldiers were relegated to menial labor as stevedores and laborers. |
|
A classic tear-jerker about a woman doing menial labor to support her ungrateful son. |
|
The very poor often neglected their deaf children, condemning them to a lifetime of menial labor. |
|
His father speaks halting Dutch, and has been crippled by years of menial labor. |
|
He took on a number of menial jobs, including dish-washing and working in a pea-canning factory, to pay his way through pupillage. |
|
In some cases, this is accomplished by taking menial jobs, in which case education levels are of relative unimportance. |
|
From there, they are hired out for menial tasks such as washing dishes and selling and transporting various wares. |
|
These youngsters have little chance to break free from a life of poverty and often end up working in menial, low-paid jobs. |
|
Only one employée is an Aborigine, doing the most menial tasks and seemingly lobotomised and ashamed at the same time. |
|
After being promised the joys of French life, she is kept inside the house, relegated to menial tasks and misunderstood and maltreated by the mother. |
|
Each first-class cavalryman, three or four second-class cavalrymen and sixteen infantrymen had a slave or paid servant to look after baggage and perform menial chores. |
|
Assigning them to specific menial or dead-end jobs as a condition of welfare is bad social policy and is tantamount to servitude. |
|
Many of those present had spent the last 20 years as the victims of the regime's bullying: for some, the fate was menial labour. |
|
He moved to the West in 1957, worked in menial jobs and saved up enough money to open a shop in Stuttgart. |
|
There were menial jobs, such as picking up garbage, for the people during the construction phase. |
|
Second, preferential treatment is usually given to nationals, although particular kinds of menial work are allocated to foreigners. |
|
Family roles are turned-upside-down as children are sent to work at menial tasks to support their families rather than to school. |
|
A lack of literacy and numeracy skills means lowpaid menial work, with little hope of rising out of poverty. |
|
They are only allowed to work in menial jobs such as housekeeping, latrine-digging, shoemaking, hairdressing, and metal work. |
|
|
Child labour is so widespread that in rural areas it seems normal to people that children work doing menial tasks. |
|
They provide IT professionals with the freedom to be released from menial tasks, enabling them to take a more strategic role in the enterprise. |
|
At home and in society at large, women and girls carry out more menial tasks and their voices are less likely to be heard. |
|
A child may be required to work certain shifts or to perform all menial work not required of other employees. |
|
One of the most effective ways to learn about an organization is to roll up your sleeves and do the menial tasks that are necessary in any job. |
|
Although I hated the menial tasks the job required, it gave me a window into the power of local government. |
|
The government knows older people will be forced out of decent jobs and forced into menial jobs like filling supermarket trolleys and opening doors for a pittance. |
|
They refused to carry out the menial work, such as carrying luggage across coral from the main boat to the settlement and, you know, emptying the night cart. |
|
His behaviour is said to have included regularly dressing down officers in front of other staff and ordering them to do menial tasks when they were tired. |
|
The rear tyre got punctured, but with the help of a couple of menial workers and a beggar, my father was able to push the car to the tyre repair garage. |
|
We think of it like bricklaying, farming, or any other seemingly menial skill. |
|
Regardless of whether she enjoyed the menial work of typing or selling or waitressing or clerking, she at least had freedom of movement to a degree. |
|
While she was gone a menial came by to light the ceiling lamps, a touch with a burning taper on the end of a pole and the gas wicks glowed to life. |
|
He finds he is not mean-spirited enough to be a criminal, not tough enough to be a police officer, and too smart to subject himself to menial work. |
|
A poet, teacher and journalist, he was barred from earning a living except by menial labor. |
|
The lack of confidence and education forced some to work on menial tasks. |
|
This crisis causes farmers to abandon their land and migrate toward urban areas to find menial work, or to illegally immigrate to more financially stable countries. |
|
It seems feasible that simple robots designed to perform menial household tasks and non-complex low-paid jobs are likely to become common in our lifetimes. |
|
We're generally taught that housework is a menial, even demeaning task. |
|
He got her slippers and took off her boots. It delighted him to perform menial offices. |
|
|
His sister was a menial girl, but he sought to help her develop a mind of her own. |
|
The young man seems to entertain but an imperfect appreciation of the respect due from a menial to a Castilian hidalgo. |
|
In other parts of the world, the forces of demand and supply that propel women and children into menial occupations seem to be leading in the opposite direction. |
|
Canadian students work at menial jobs without any loss of pride or status. |
|
Nevertheless, these women have undeniably made a significant contribution to society throughout their lives by raising their children and doing jobs that are menial, badly paid and, usually, undeclared. |
|
Forced into the most dangerous and menial work, they lack the rights of legal city residents and are typically forced to live in segregated areas. |
|
However menial the task, they were working. |
|
Charles Murray worries that we've made it too easy to be a menial worker. |
|
People get tired of applying for menial jobs and the changes. |
|
The transfer of unskilled jobs to developing countries and of menial jobs to immigrants has put a new premium on education: today's rich-world youth has far more schooling than previous generations. |
|
And walk is probably the right word because when you can't really walk you realise how vulnerable and how impossible it is to do menial day-to-day tasks. |
|
Overprotection is another barrier preventing disabled girls in India achieving an equal level of education, which in turn keeps them in menial low paying jobs. |
|
Civil servants have been reduced to moonlighting in menial jobs to make up for their shrinking buying power. In this section When will it ever end? |
|
Mr. Jiang was far away, doing menial labor in the coastal city of Xiamen. |
|
Much of the employment has been temporary and involved menial labor. |
|
There are no menial jobs, only menial attitudes. |
|
Only 20 percent said they had too much scut work, and 22 percent reported no menial work at all. |
|
He worked at a string of menial jobs, including loading trucks and operating a leaf blower. |
|
He was likely kept at constant menial tasks to limit his time for contemplation and came to view his treatment as an enforced absence from scholarly life. |
|
I can think of no more welcome sight than two strapping great lads in shorts and woggles knocking at my door, offering to take over the menial tasks. |
|
|
Before his return to Wales, Williams worked mainly in menial jobs, and later studied intermittently at both the University College of Swansea and Bangor. |
|