If you describe a person or a machine as a workhorse, you mean that they can be relied upon to do a large amount of work, especially work that is dull or routine. the Wellington bomber, the great workhorse of the war My husband never even looked at me. I was just a workhorse bringing up three children. a person, machine, or vehicle that does a lot of work, especially when it is hard or boring
a horse used for plowing and hauling and other heavy labor machine that performs dependably under heavy use; "the IBM main frame computers have been the workhorse of the business world
{i} horse used for labor; person who works very hard; very useful or dependable machine or vehicle
work horse
التركية النطق
wırk hôrs
النطق
/ˈwərk ˈhôrs/ /ˈwɜrk ˈhɔːrs/
علم أصول الكلمات
[ 'w&rk ] (noun.) before 12th century. Middle English werk, work, from Old English werc, weorc; akin to Old High German werc work, Greek ergon, Avestan varandzem activity.