0 to avoid work, duties, or responsibilities, especially if they are difficult or unpleasant -- 逃避; 規避(尤指困難或令人不快的工作、責任等)
If you shirk your responsibilities/duties now, the situation will be much harder to deal with next month. 如果你現在逃避責任的話,情況到了下個月只會變得更難處理。
I will not shirk from my obligations. 我不會逃避我的義務。
Assume that the probability of detecting shirking workers depends on the complexity of the routine of which they are part.
In addition, all parties know that the probability of verification given shirking is one-third.
To highlight the effect of disincentives, they play two games that are identical except that one allows employers to punish workers for shirking.
Basically, boundary nouns are shirked at conflict sites.
He does not shirk the convolutions of geochemistry.
Schilling never shirks her duties as a scholar.
There are, however, also professors who "shirk" (the term used in principalagent theory) their teaching obligations to do research, consulting, and so forth.
His or her counterpart in the sugar plantations elsewhere in the world was concerned about shirking and industriousness.