(obsolete) The amount of land that can be worked in a day.
(obsolete) The work done in a day; a day's work.
Work carried out or paid for on a daily basis; day labour.
Work done during the day; specifically, the cover-work carried out by someone involved in intelligence work, as opposed to their secret activities.
kayward
keyword
keyword
noun
(cryptography) Any word used as the key to a code.
(information science) Any important word in a text or document, which may be linked to other words or other information, or at least merely listed in the metadata for searches to find.
(information science) Any word used in a reference work to link to other words or other information.
(linguistics) Any word that occurs in a text more often than normal.
(programming) A reserved word used to identify a specific command, function, etc.
verb
(transitive) To tag with keywords, as for example to facilitate searching.
skidway
skidway
noun
A skid road.
skyward
skyward
adj
Pointing or facing at or moving toward the sky.
adv
At or toward the sky.
weekday
weekday
noun
(Islam) Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, but not Friday.
(Judaism) Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday, but not Saturday.
(now rare) Any day of the week (Monday through Sunday).
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday, but not Saturday or Sunday.
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, or Saturday, but not Sunday. (e.g. in Vietnam)
workday
workday
adj
Alternative form of workaday.
noun
(chiefly US) Any of the days of a week on which work is done. The five workdays in many countries are usually Monday to Friday (and are defined as such in official and legal usage even though many people work on weekends).
(chiefly US) That part of a day in which work is done.