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Hours Time I Office Spent Takes Long Early

Word3 hour
WordType (noun)
Phonetic /ˈaʊə(r)/ /ˈaʊər/
Example
  • i spent an hour on the phone.
  • it will take about an hour to get there.
  • it usually takes me two hours to walk there.
  • the interview lasted half an hour.
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Content

hour

(noun)/ˈaʊə(r)/ /ˈaʊər/
  1. 60 minutes; one of the 24 parts that a day is divided into
    • SEE ALSO half hour
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/half-hour
    • I spent an hour on the phone.
    • It will take about an hour to get there.
    • It usually takes me two hours to walk there.
    • The interview lasted half an hour.
    • It was a three-hour exam.
    • Most cats sleep 13–16 hours a day.
    • Architects can expect to spend 40 hours a week in meetings.
    • I waited for a couple of hours and then I left.
    • He'll be back in an hour.
    • In less than twenty-four hours it would be Christmas.
    • We're paid by the hour.
    • Top speed is 120 miles per hour.
    • The rate of pay is £10.50 an hour.
    • We hope to be there within the hour (= in less than an hour).
    • York was within an hour's drive.
    • He crossed the line in a time of 2 hours and 40 minutes.
    • Chicago is two hours away (= it takes two hours to get there).
    • We're four hours ahead of New York (= referring to the time difference).
    • I sat there, hour after hour, staring at a blank computer screen.

    Extra Examples

    • He's been gone for over an hour.
    • I should be back within a couple of hours.
    • I sat there for two hours.
    • I slept for eight solid hours.
    • It takes two hours to get to London.
    • She grew more worried with every passing hour.
    • She worked for three hours.
    • The performance lasted three hours.
    • There are still two hours of daylight left.
    • You gain five hours when you fly from New York to London.
    • an hour of rest
  2. a period of about an hour, used for a particular purpose
    • SEE ALSO happy hour
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/happy-hour
    • I spent my lunch hour shopping.
  3. a fixed period of time during which people work, an office is open, etc.
    • SEE ALSO after-hours
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/after-hours
    • Opening hours are from 10 to 6 each day.
    • Most people in this kind of job tend to work long hours.
    • The library is open during normal working hours.
    • What are your office hours?
    • a hospital’s visiting hours
    • Britain's licensing hours (= when pubs are allowed to open) used to be very restricted.
    • This is the only place to get a drink after hours (= after the normal closing time for pubs).
    • You can contact me on this number out of hours (= when the office is closed).

    Extra Examples

    • Doctors often have to work out of hours.
    • He keeps regular hours.
    • He spends a lot of time in his office after hours.
    • Bakers have to work unsocial hours.
    • She works very long hours.
    • the number of contact hours (= working hours spent with students or clients, not working alone) per week
    • The office is closed between the hours of twelve and two.
    • the hours of darkness
  4. a long time
    • It took hours getting there.
    • It took us hours to find out what was wrong.
    • ‘How long did it last?’ ‘Oh, hours and hours.’
    • Where have you been? I've been waiting hours.
    • I've been waiting for hours.
  5. a particular point in time
    • SEE ALSO witching hour
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/the-witching-hour
    • You can't turn him away at this hour of the night.
    • The hour had come for us to leave.
  6. the time when something important happens
    • This was often thought of as the country's finest hour.
    • She thought her last hour had come.
    • Don't desert me in my hour of need.
    • She helped me in my hour of need.
  7. the time when it is exactly 1 o’clock, 2 o’clock, etc.
    • The clock struck the hour.
    • ten minutes past the hour
    • There's a bus every hour on the hour
  8. used when giving the time according to the 24-hour clock, usually in military or other official language
    • The first missile was launched at 2300 hours (= at 11 p.m.).
  9. any time, especially a time that is not usual or suitable
    • He's started staying out till all hours (= until very late at night).
    • She thinks she can call me at all hours of the day and night.
  10. at the last possible moment; just in time
  11. very early, especially when this is annoying
    • The job involved getting up at some unearthly hour to catch the first train.
  12. very early or very late and therefore annoying
    • I apologize for calling you at this ungodly hour.
  13. the time when you have to do something difficult or unpleasant
    • I’d better go and see the dentist—I can’t put off the evil hour any longer.
    • If you keep on borrowing, you are only postponing the evil day when you have to pay it all back.
  14. if you keep regular, strange, etc. hours, the times at which you do things (especially getting up or going to bed) are regular, strange, etc.
  15. to spend time doing something that is not important while you are waiting for something else to happen
    • We killed time playing cards.
  16. the period of time very early in the morning, soon after midnight
    • We worked well into the small hours.
    • The fighting began in the early hours of Saturday morning.
    • The party continued well into the early hours.

    Word Origin

    • Middle English: from Anglo-Norman French ure, via Latin from Greek hōra ‘season, hour’.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

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