释义 |
Definition of McJob in English: McJobnoun məkˈdʒɒbməkˈjäb A low-paid job with few prospects. while trying to get established, she worked in the usual series of no-hope McJobs Example sentencesExamples - Bagging groceries for the elderly, scrubbing dishes at pizzerias or flipping greasy burgers at a McJob is about as glamorous as employment gets for most 16 year olds.
- Slightly disappointing, I'd have liked the hike in pay and the new location, but on the flip side, the job would have been a McJob.
- Furthermore a McJob provides for many the first step into much more exciting work.
- Many expected that North American would be reduced to a McJobs economy buying the output of sweatshops located in Far-East dictatorships.
- There's not one mention of a slacker or a McJob anywhere.
- If you aspire to a McJob, you will receive McWages, and there is nothing for it.
- I lived on the dole, and I wanted a McJob so I could buy the stuff other people had, because it would make me happy.
- Incidentally, I think that Webster's has it wrong; a McJob isn't just a low-paid dead-end job.
Origin 1980s: from McDonald's, a chain of fast food restaurants, + job, with allusion to the company’s practice of using Mc- in its proprietary product names. Definition of McJob in US English: McJobnounməkˈjäb A low-paid job with few prospects. while trying to get established, she worked in the usual series of no-hope McJobs Example sentencesExamples - Bagging groceries for the elderly, scrubbing dishes at pizzerias or flipping greasy burgers at a McJob is about as glamorous as employment gets for most 16 year olds.
- If you aspire to a McJob, you will receive McWages, and there is nothing for it.
- Many expected that North American would be reduced to a McJobs economy buying the output of sweatshops located in Far-East dictatorships.
- Furthermore a McJob provides for many the first step into much more exciting work.
- Slightly disappointing, I'd have liked the hike in pay and the new location, but on the flip side, the job would have been a McJob.
- Incidentally, I think that Webster's has it wrong; a McJob isn't just a low-paid dead-end job.
- There's not one mention of a slacker or a McJob anywhere.
- I lived on the dole, and I wanted a McJob so I could buy the stuff other people had, because it would make me happy.
Origin 1980s: from McDonald's, a chain of fast food restaurants, + job, with allusion to the company’s practice of using Mc- in its proprietary product names. |