elbow grease
Noun: - Hard physical work, especially involving vigorous effort or scrubbing: The term "elbow grease" is an informal idiom referring to strenuous physical labor, often the kind that makes one sweat or involves persistent manual effort to clean, polish, or accomplish a task.
"Elbow grease" is used to emphasize that a task requires diligent physical effort and cannot be accomplished easily or with tools alone. It is often used in the context of cleaning, polishing, or manual labor. - It is typically used as an uncountable noun. - Common collocations include: require elbow grease, need some elbow grease, apply elbow grease, use elbow grease.
- "to apply elbow grease": To put in hard physical work.
- He applied a lot of elbow grease to sand the wooden table smooth.
- "the [something] of elbow grease": Used to personify the effort as the main ingredient or tool.
- The secret to a spotless window is a good cleaner and the elbow grease of a determined person.
- Effort (n): The physical or mental energy needed to do something. (More general and formal than "elbow grease").
- Exertion (n): Physical or mental effort. (More formal).
- Hard work (n phrase): The direct, non-idiomatic equivalent.
- Hard work
- Manual labor
- Sweat equity (informal, implies hard work as an investment)
- Toil
- "Blood, sweat, and tears": Extremely hard work involving great sacrifice. (This is more intense and dramatic than "elbow grease").
- "To break one's back": To work extremely hard.
- "To sweat over something": To work hard on a task.
"Elbow grease" is a humorous and metaphorical idiom. It personifies hard work as a substance (like a grease or lubricant) that you apply from your elbow's movement. It suggests that success comes from persistent physical effort rather than magic solutions or advanced technology.
- use of physical or mental energy; hard work
- he got an A for effort
- they managed only with great exertion