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able-bodied
[ ey-buhl-bod-eed ]
adjective
- having a strong, healthy body; physically fit:
A couple of able-bodied guys dragged the tree off to the shoulder of the road and got traffic moving again.
- Sometimes Offensive. free from or unaffected by physical disability:
There is a three-month limit on food assistance benefits for able-bodied adults who work fewer than 20 hours per week.
able-bodied
adjective
- physically strong and healthy; robust
- not having a physical disability
Usage
Sensitive Note
Other Words From
- able-bodied·ness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of able-bodied1
Example Sentences
Able-bodied people rarely notice the barriers that riddle the world which keep the disabled from participating in society.
More than half of able-bodied SNAP recipients work in the year in which they receive benefits.
Ultimately, that included Andrea, Milton, Merle, and all but one of the adult, able-bodied residents of Woodbury.
The labor force participation rate (the percentage of able-bodied adults in the workforce) fell as well.
I hated that as an able-bodied male, I was expected to go out for football, basketball, and track.
It is followed by forty-four pages of argument and illustration relating exclusively to the able-bodied wage-earner.
The wonder is that between sword and halter there was any able-bodied man left in Munster.
As in the Report itself, no definition is given in the Act of what was meant by "able-bodied persons."
We can find no explanation of, or reason for, the entire absence of any provision for independent women who were able-bodied.
The outdoor relief sanctioned for able-bodied men was strictly limited to persons who were not in employment for hire.
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