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miners - Master This Word

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miners Word Meanings

  • a person who works in a mine
  • a worker extracting minerals from the earth
  • someone who digs for valuable resources underground
Illustration for this word

miners Example Sentences

Example sentences are the start of understanding. Don't rush to memorize. First feel how the word works in a sentence.

miners Phonetic & Pronunciation

Pronunciation
UK /maɪn/
US /maɪn/
Syllables
mine

miners Word Etymology

Root: mine (to extract minerals), Latin: 'minera' (to extract); Memory image: envision a miner in a dark, damp tunnel, carefully extracting shiny gems and precious metals from the rock.

Note 1: These definitions and etymologies are not standard dictionary definitions, but extended explanations provided to help with memorization and understanding of the actual application of words. Through this background information, we strive to make words more vivid and easier to understand, and help you remember their meanings in real life.

Note 2: LexiTalk designs the learning flow around the linguistics principle of “Comprehensible Input.” When learners encounter material that is slightly above their level but still understandable from context, the brain naturally absorbs the language. That’s why we keep every word inside authentic contexts, using examples and associations to help you understand it and use it flexibly.

Read the FAQ explanation of Comprehensible Input

English Brain Route

I push open a heavy door and step into a cool, dusty tunnel. I move slowly, my lamp tilting as I shift my grip on the pick and feel the air change around me. The rhythm of work is tangible: set my stance, adjust my pace, hold steady, and keep going. In that moment, the scene isn’t a place but a person—the mine worker—someone who digs for wealth beneath the earth, and the word mine lands in my mind as their role.

Real Context

Mine as a noun here refers to a person who works in a mine, i. e., a miner. The job is to extract minerals from the earth, usually underground in tunnels and with safety gear. In everyday English, the standard noun for the worker is miner, while mine is more often used for the site or in historical texts. Learners often mix up miner and mine, or confuse mine with the possessive pronoun mine. Pronunciation also differs: mine rhymes with sign, while miner rhymes with diner. The plural is miners. This sense focuses on labor rather than ownership or location and contrasts with the separate sense of mine as a place.

Usage Reminders

  • Remember mine can refer to the place (the mine) or the person (miner) in historical or formal contexts
  • Don't use mine when you mean the worker; use miner
  • Mine is the noun for the place too, pronounce differently from my
  • Use collocations like coal mine, gold mine, mining site
  • Miners is the plural for the worker; mines is the plural for places

Common Misconceptions

  • Mine is only a place, not a person
  • Mine is the possessive pronoun 'mine' for 'my'
  • Miner is just a version of mine, they mean the same
  • Miners and mines are interchangeable
  • Mine always refers to radioactive or explosive contexts

Thinking Differences

English distinguishes mine (the place) from miner (the person) but in many languages the distinctions may rely on different word forms or suffixes; learners often see similar roots and assume they are interchangeable.

Learning Tips

  • Practice with both mine and miner in sentences
  • Listen for the plural miners vs mines
  • Pair with common collocations like mining site and mining equipment
  • Compare pronunciation: mine vs miner
  • Remember mine as place and mine as pronoun are unrelated here
  • Use examples you encounter in news about mining

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