English edit

Noun edit

hired hand (plural hired hands)

  1. A person who is employed to perform routine chores and manual labor, especially on a farm or ranch.
    • 1866, Bayard Taylor, chapter 1, in The Story of Kennett:
      [H]e was numbered among the missing after the Brandywine battle, and presently turned up as a hired hand on the Barton farm.
    • 1896, Stephen Crane, chapter 2, in The Third Violet:
      I rented th' back five-acre to John Westfall. I had more'n I could handle with only one hired hand.
    • 1990 July 20, Dirk Johnson, “A Farmer, 70, Saw No Choice; Nor Did the Sentencing Judge”, in New York Times, retrieved 29 November 2011:
      The Krikavas' farm was auctioned off in pieces. . . . Kevin Krikava, 29, now works as a hired hand on another farm.

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