show up for work

  • 41Show Boat (1936 film) — Infobox Film name = Show Boat image size = caption = director = James Whale producer = Carl Laemmle Jr. writer = Edna Ferber (novel) Oscar Hammerstein II narrator = starring = Irene Dunne Allan Jones Charles Winninger Paul Robeson Helen Morgan… …

    Wikipedia

  • 42show — v. & n. v. (past part. shown or showed) 1 intr. & tr. be, or allow or cause to be, visible; manifest; appear (the buds are beginning to show; white shows the dirt). 2 tr. (often foll. by to) offer, exhibit, or produce (a thing) for scrutiny etc.… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 43Show People — Infobox Film name = Show People caption = director = King Vidor producer = Irving Thalberg writer = narrator = starring = Marion Davies William Haines Charles Chaplin (uncredited) music = cinematography = John Arnold editing = Hugh Wynn… …

    Wikipedia

  • 44Show hunter — The show hunter is a type of show horse in the that is judged on its movement, manners, and way of going, particularly while jumping fences. The horses are shown in hunt seat style tack, and are often of Warmblood or Thoroughbred type. In the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 45show — showable, adj. showless, adj. /shoh/, v., showed, shown or showed, showing, n. v.t. 1. to cause or allow to be seen; exhibit; display. 2. to present or perform as a public entertainment or spectacle: to show a movie. 3. to indicate; point out: to …

    Universalium

  • 46show — verb (past participle shown or showed) 1》 be, allow, or cause to be visible.     ↘exhibit or produce for inspection.     ↘present (a film or television programme) on a screen for viewing.     ↘represent or depict in art.     ↘(show oneself or one …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 47work — /wɜk / (say werk) noun 1. exertion directed to produce or accomplish something; labour; toil. 2. that on which exertion or labour is expended; something to be made or done; a task or undertaking. 3. productive or operative activity. 4. manner or… …

  • 48show — I. verb (showed; shown or showed; showing) Etymology: Middle English shewen, showen, from Old English scēawian to look, look at, see; akin to Old High German scouwōn to look, look at, and probably to Latin cavēre to be on one s guard Date: 12th… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 49show — Synonyms and related words: Grand Guignol, Passion play, Prospero, Tom show, accompany, accord, account for, acting, advertise, affect, affectation, affectedness, afford, afford proof of, air, airiness, airs, airs and graces, alibi, allege,… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 50Work order — A work order (WO) is an order received by an organization from a customer or client, or an order created internally within the organization. A work order may be for products or services. In a manufacturing environment, a work order is converted… …

    Wikipedia