English edit

Adjective edit

labour-saving (comparative more labour-saving, superlative most labour-saving)

  1. Alternative form of labor-saving.
    • 1904, Carolyn Wells, “Shopping”, in Patty at Home, New York, N.Y.: Dodd, Mead & Company, →OCLC, page 63:
      Not only kitchen utensils, but laundry fittings, and household furnishings generally; including patent labour-saving devices, and newly invented contrivances which were supposed to be of great aid to any housewife.
    • 1906, Edwin A. Pratt, chapter 10, in The Transition in Agriculture[1], London: John Murray, page 116:
      [] potato-growing can evidently be more profitably followed by producers on a large scale, having all the advantages of labour-saving appliances, than by market-gardeners, allotment-holders, and other spade-workers on comparatively small line.
    • 2007, Tim Blanning, The Pursuit of Glory, Penguin, published 2008, page 97:
      Thanks to the adoption by Amsterdam shipyards of standardized designs and labour-saving devices, the fluyt maximized carrying capacity and minimized cost.