See also: working class

English edit

Adjective edit

working-class (comparative more working-class, superlative most working-class)

  1. Of or pertaining to the working class; suggestive of the working class in manner of speaking, outlook, appearance, or other qualities.
    • 1971, Barry Hindess, The Decline of Working-Class Politics, page 9:
      There is one obvious sense in which working-class politics has declined in the last twenty years or so: the proportion of working-class people involved at various levels of party politics has dropped.
    • 1986, Theresa Conway, A Passion for Glory, page 78:
      Jean-Baptiste ordered herb soup, potatoes, and cheese along with two glasses of beer — a typical working-class lunch, he said to Aimee with a smile.
    • 2001, Stephen Hopkins, Cathy Long, John Williams, Passing Rhythms: Liverpool FC and the Transformation of Football, page 27:
      It was a very working-class crowd on the Kop, mainly dockers and the like.
    • 2007, Joe Studwell, “How to be a post-war godfather”, in Asian Godfathers: Money and Power in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia[1], 1st American edition, New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 55:
      But Run Run Shaw and his brothers are sons of a Shanghai textile magnate, Lee Shau-kee comes from a wealthy banking and gold trading family from Shuntak county in Guangdong province, and Henry Fok - though from a genuinely working-class background - was set apart by a British government scholarship to an elite school.
    • 2020 August 18, “Empty spaces in Tsz Wan Shan amid Hong Kong’s third wave of coronavirus”, in South China Morning Post[2], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2021-09-06:
      One of the areas in Hong Kong most profoundly impacted by the city’s third wave of coronavirus is Tsz Wan Shan. The usually bustling streets of the working-class neighbourhood in Kowloon now resemble a ghost town. Tsz Wan Shan has been the epicentre of a recent cluster of Covid-19 cases.

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