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working class
1noun
those persons working for wages, especially in manual labor.
the social or economic class composed of these workers.
working-class
2[wur-king-klas]
adjective
of, relating to, or characteristic of the working class, the class of wage earners or manual laborers.
He came from a working-class neighborhood in Nova Scotia, where his mother took in laundry and his father had a job in the coal mine.
working class
noun
Also called: proletariat. the social stratum, usually of low status, that consists of those who earn wages, esp as manual workers Compare lower class middle class upper class
adjective
of, relating to, or characteristic of the working class
working class
In the United States, the population of blue-collar workers, particularly skilled and semiskilled laborers, who differ in values, but not necessarily in income, from the middle class. In Marxism, this term refers to propertyless factory workers.
Other Word Forms
- working-class adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of working class1
Origin of working class2
Example Sentences
Every day I had in office, I worked to serve working class communities like the one that I grew up in, which are too often overlooked by those in power.
The state still provides ample opportunities for technological and financial elites but leaves behind a broad spectrum of the middle and working classes.
It enrages her that “some people have more barriers than others, whether it means that you’re working class or poor, or a person of color, or queer, or part of the gender spectrum.”
But Baroness Gray told peers she was "from the most working class of backgrounds" but had "learned a lot from being around people from different walks of life".
Ali previously told the BBC he wanted to bring a "working class, northern voice" to the Green Party, which he said for a long time had held "a very middle class view".
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