arbeiten

Etymology
From, from , ultimately from , from which English is also derived. Cognates include 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

Verb

 * 1)  to work to do a specific task by employing physical or mental powers
 * 2) * 1932, Erich Mühsam, Die Befreiung der Gesellschaft vom Staat, in: Erich Mühsam: Prosaschriften II, Verlag europäische ideen Berlin (1978), page 255:
 * "de"
 * "de"

- Wir verstehen unter Kommunismus die auf Gütergemeinschaft beruhende Gesellschaftsbeziehung, die jedem nach seinen Fähigkeiten zu arbeiten, jedem nach seinen Bedürfnissen zu verbrauchen erlaubt.


 * 1)  to work, function, run, operate to be operative, in action
 * 2)  to ferment to react, using fermentation
 * 3)  to work, execute to set into action
 * 4)  to make, produce to create
 * 5)  to do, perform to carry out or execute, especially something involving work
 * 6)  to work oneself (to) to make oneself (a certain state) by working
 * 7)  to work one's way to attain through work, by gradual degrees
 * 8)  to work (translated by rephrasing to use a general “you” or with the gerund, “working”) to do a specific task by employing physical or mental powers
 * 1)  to work oneself (to) to make oneself (a certain state) by working
 * 2)  to work one's way to attain through work, by gradual degrees
 * 3)  to work (translated by rephrasing to use a general “you” or with the gerund, “working”) to do a specific task by employing physical or mental powers
 * 1)  to work one's way to attain through work, by gradual degrees
 * 2)  to work (translated by rephrasing to use a general “you” or with the gerund, “working”) to do a specific task by employing physical or mental powers
 * 1)  to work (translated by rephrasing to use a general “you” or with the gerund, “working”) to do a specific task by employing physical or mental powers

Conjugation

 * The past participle can also be and rather rarely,.