0 the amount of effort that a football, rugby, etc. player or team puts into a game, especially when they do not have the ball:
We lacked that little bit of skill in the final third, but our work rate and commitment were tremendous.
Work study techniques were used to estimate work rate and the unit costs of a volume of wood extract.
The results show that total work rate and skidding costs with delays are 11.43 m3/h and $7.25/m3, respectively.
He suggests that it is adaptive to increase work rate when the rate of reinforcement is increased.
There was no significant difference in work rate between the two tests (p=0.35, n=26).
For a tiny organisation, its work rate is phenomenal.
In other words, what is the likely work rate expected of the assessors?
She deserves congratulations on her work rate, as well as on her dedication to these important issues.
And the work rate being demanded corresponds to the institution the citizens want.