Toil means to work very hard, often in a way that is tiring. People use this word when they do difficult or long jobs that need strong effort.
He toils in the field all day long.
She toiled to finish her school work.
Here, toil means to move slowly and with difficulty because it needs much effort. It is often used when the way is hard or tired.
They toiled up the steep hill together.
He toiled through the thick snow slowly.
As a noun, toil means hard or tiring work. It refers to the effort or labor someone puts into a difficult task.
His daily toil helped the family survive.
She hated the toil of cleaning the house.
This meaning shows toil as suffering or struggling to do something hard, often related to thinking or feeling, not just physical work.
She toiled over her difficult decisions alone.
He toiled through his studies with little help.
This meaning focuses on the physical effort part of toil. It means working hard at a physical job, often tiring and demanding strength.
The workers toiled under the hot sun all day.
He toiled to build the wooden fence carefully.
This meaning describes life or work that is very hard and tiring, often with no fun or reward. It speaks about the condition, not a specific action.
Years of toil broke his spirit slowly.
The toil of the job made her tired every day.