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 overtime ['әuvәtaim]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 超时, 加班, 延长时间

a. 超时的, 加班的

ad. 加班地

vt. 使超过时间

[化] 加班时间




    overtime
    [ noun ]
    1. work done in addition to regular working hours

    2. <noun.time>
    3. playing time beyond regulation, to break a tie

    4. <noun.time>
    [ adv ]
    1. beyond the regular time

    2. <adv.all>
      she often has to work overtime


    Overtime \O"ver*time`\, n.
    1. Time beyond, or in excess of, a limit; esp., extra working
    time.

    2. (Sports) An extra period of time provided to play a game,
    beyond the end of the normal period allowed for the game,
    for the purpose of resolving a tie score; as, the team won
    in overtime.
    [PJC]

    {sudden death overtime} an overtime[2] in which the first
    team to score wins the game; -- contrasted with normal
    overtime[2], which is a fixed period of time during which
    either team may score as often as they can.
    [PJC]

    1. Cupid has been working overtime in this southwestern Ohio town as Valentine's Day nears.
    2. Williams said all the companies are requiring excessive overtime rather than hiring additional employees, which increases pension and benefit expenses.
    3. On Monday and Tuesday, rail services were badly disrupted by a ban on overtime by train drivers belonging to another union, the Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen.
    4. About half the special police force, formed by putting officers on four hours of voluntary overtime after a full eight-hour shift, went to augment regular patrols in the south-central area, where gangs are most active.
    5. Incomes for salaried workers rose 6.3 per cent in the year to July, compared with a 1.8 per cent cut in incomes for manufacturing workers mainly because of lower bonuses and less overtime.
    6. As the Big Three auto makers gear up for the 1988 model year, Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. have scheduled overtime at several plants for tomorrow and next week.
    7. It also criticized Exxon incentive awards for crews who work long hours and said the oil company has "manipulated" shipboard reporting of overtime and workload.
    8. Hotel accommodations for security personnel and other aides cost $336,414; overtime for those personnel cost $256,205; per diem food costs were $183,030; and $141,464 was spent to install telephone lines.
    9. But it ruled that many staffers could be given compensatory time off in lieu of overtime pay. The House only made its staffers eligible for overtime last year.
    10. But it ruled that many staffers could be given compensatory time off in lieu of overtime pay. The House only made its staffers eligible for overtime last year.
    11. A reduction in mandatory overtime to two consecutive weekends and 144 hours per quarter with double-time pay after 160 hours.
    12. All of which explains why, even in the current depressed car market, both Chrysler minivan plants are working two full shifts, with overtime.
    13. A clerk from the Vital Statistics office at the state Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services put in overtime this weekend pulling death certificates for investigators.
    14. The auto maker slated five of its plants for overtime this weekend.
    15. It also reduced the amount of overtime Boeing could require, and, according to the company, improved the cost-of-living formula for workers and provided significant increases in medical coverage and other benefits.
    16. "For a defeat, it was more like a victory," state radio said after the Lions' close 3-2 overtime loss t England Sunday night.
    17. The move comes after the company's workers' council gave its agreement to the overtime shifts.
    18. Kaspar attributed the sleeping incidents to excessive overtime required by Westinghouse.
    19. The average hourly earnings index, which excludes wage changes caused by factory overtime and shift differentials, rose slightly to 179.4% of its 1977 average from 179.3% in July.
    20. The department's hourly earnings index, which excludes wage changes caused by factory overtime and shift differentials, increased to 173.1% of its 1977 average from 172.7% in May.
    21. Ford Motor Co. said its truck plants in Kansas City and Louisville, Ky., worked daily overtime this week.
    22. Militant black unions launched a two-week, nationwide consumer boycott of white-owned stores and told their 1.5 million members to refuse to work overtime for the next four weeks.
    23. Union representatives had asked the company for merit pay, 100 percent job security, a reduction in overtime and the recall of 1,000 laid off UAW members.
    24. It requires overtime and Sunday work and cuts medical benefits to retirees.
    25. Even to meet its three-times-delayed opening, special-effects houses and post-production facilities all over town are working feverishly (and on expensive overtime) to finish the picture.
    26. As the tour counted its take, municipalities were totaling their costs, mostly for police overtime.
    27. The incidents occurred just two months after the National Transportation Safety Board issued a report saying that chronic understaffing, mandatory overtime, outdated equipment and inadequate training had contributed to mistakes at O'Hare.
    28. The unions also banned overtime work and have threatened civil disobedience unless the bill is withdrawn.
    29. This will effectively abolish overtime rates, yet will oblige the workforce to work up to 80 hours a week at peak periods. The dispute has highlighted Britain's opt-out on the social chapter of the Maastricht treaty.
    30. Seiders said builders are working overtime in California, fearing the eventual imposition of growth limits by local governments in crowded southern counties in the state.
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