What is the difference between laborer and fellah?
laborer | fellah |
One who uses body strength instead of intellectual power to earn a wage, usually hourly.
A peasant, farmer or agricultural laborer in the Middle East and North Africa.
* 1920', (Archibald Sayce), “” in ''Folk-Lore'' ' 31 p. 176
* 1922 , (James Joyce), Ulysses :
* 1957 , (Lawrence Durrell), Justine :
* 1955 , (Paul Bowles), The Spider's House :
*1977 , (Alistair Horne), A Savage War of Peace , New York Review Books 2006, p. 39:
*:It differed from the Ulema both in a more modernistic interpretation of Islamic dogma and in its social demands, which included the redistribution of land among the fellahs .
As nouns the difference between laborer and fellah
is that laborer is one who uses body strength instead of intellectual power to earn a wage, usually hourly while fellah is a peasant, farmer or agricultural laborer in the middle east and north africa or fellah can be (fella).laborer
English
Alternative forms
* labourerNoun
(en noun)fellah
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) ‘tiller of the soil’.Noun
- Religion long kept the two races, Arab and Egyptian, apart, and when eventually the Christian fella? in the neighbourhood of Cairo had become Mohammedan, the Mohammedan Arab had become a townsman with a townsman’s sense of superiority over the country bumpkin.
- It has the prophetic vision. Fuit Ilium! The sack of windy Troy. Kingdoms of this world. The masters of the Mediterranean are fellaheen today.
- Before her, seated half-crouching upon a wicker chair, was a big-breasted sphinx-faced fellah girl, with her skirt drawn up above her waist to expose some choice object of my friend's study.
- All of them were crudely caricatured scenes of life among Moslems: a schoolmaster, ruler in hand, presiding over a class of small boys, a fellah ploughing, a drunk being ordered out of a bar.