| 释义 | 
		Definition of jobless in English: joblessadjective ˈdʒɒbləsˈdʒɑbləs Unemployed. 失业的,无业的  thousands of jobless youngsters Example sentencesExamples -  And while we see our economy recovering slowly, it's a jobless recovery.
 -  According to the Labor Department, 8,594,000 workers are officially jobless.
 -  A similar result was recorded in Tasmania, where the jobless rate rose to 8.5 per cent.
 -  The truth is that Europeans like early retirement, high jobless benefits and long vacations.
 -  Russell intends to leave him jobless for a while.
 -  Also, workers laid off from part-time jobs should be eligible for jobless benefits.
 -  In the last 13 years, 13 prominent units have closed down, rendering 10,000 people jobless.
 -  The advent of safety razors has rendered local barbers jobless.
 -  Her second daughter was also infected but recovered and has been jobless ever since.
 -  She was left jobless, with a child to take care of.
 -  She also noted that as a result of restructuring and retrenchments, a lot of people had been left jobless.
 -  Live registers figures for March show that there are now over 1000 people jobless in Listowel.
 -  And as anyone who has found herself jobless knows, it was a rough landing.
 -  The weekly jobless claims this week came in lower than expected.
 -  Being jobless, I used to attend all the meetings of the Cultural conference.
 -  Miami, Florida, with a 7.4 percent jobless rate, had the second highest in the nation.
 -  The jobless figures indicate that the current economic upturn has a quite peculiar character.
 -  Germany's comparatively high jobless figure is also a reflection of the way the country compiles its data.
 -  Millions in the armed services found themselves jobless between 1955 and 1960.
 -  Well over 10 million people were jobless in the face of savage inflation.
 
 Synonyms unemployed, out of work, without work, out of a job, without paid employment, unwaged, workless, between jobs, redundant, laid off North American on welfare, collecting unemployment British informal signing on, on the dole, ‘resting’ Australian/New Zealand informal on the wallaby track North American informal collecting rare disemployed    Definition of jobless in US English: joblessadjectiveˈjäbləsˈdʒɑbləs Unemployed. 失业的,无业的  thousands of jobless youngsters Example sentencesExamples -  A similar result was recorded in Tasmania, where the jobless rate rose to 8.5 per cent.
 -  The jobless figures indicate that the current economic upturn has a quite peculiar character.
 -  And as anyone who has found herself jobless knows, it was a rough landing.
 -  And while we see our economy recovering slowly, it's a jobless recovery.
 -  The truth is that Europeans like early retirement, high jobless benefits and long vacations.
 -  The weekly jobless claims this week came in lower than expected.
 -  Live registers figures for March show that there are now over 1000 people jobless in Listowel.
 -  Millions in the armed services found themselves jobless between 1955 and 1960.
 -  The advent of safety razors has rendered local barbers jobless.
 -  Miami, Florida, with a 7.4 percent jobless rate, had the second highest in the nation.
 -  Well over 10 million people were jobless in the face of savage inflation.
 -  Her second daughter was also infected but recovered and has been jobless ever since.
 -  In the last 13 years, 13 prominent units have closed down, rendering 10,000 people jobless.
 -  Russell intends to leave him jobless for a while.
 -  She also noted that as a result of restructuring and retrenchments, a lot of people had been left jobless.
 -  Also, workers laid off from part-time jobs should be eligible for jobless benefits.
 -  Germany's comparatively high jobless figure is also a reflection of the way the country compiles its data.
 -  She was left jobless, with a child to take care of.
 -  According to the Labor Department, 8,594,000 workers are officially jobless.
 -  Being jobless, I used to attend all the meetings of the Cultural conference.
 
 Synonyms unemployed, out of work, without work, out of a job, without paid employment, unwaged, workless, between jobs, redundant, laid off     |