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  1. Someone who has hands-on experience of something has done or used it rather than just read or learned about it: Many employers consider hands-on experience to be as useful as academic qualifications. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  2. Hands-on experience or work involves actually doing a particular thing, rather than just talking about it or getting someone else to do it. Ninety-nine per cent of primary pupils now have hands-on experience of computers.

  3. The meaning of HANDS-ON is relating to, being, or providing direct practical experience in the operation or functioning of something; also : involving or allowing use of or touching with the hands. How to use hands-on in a sentence.

  4. Is it hands on or hands-on? Hands-on is an adjective that describes a type of labor or an active predisposition toward something. Hands on is sometimes a verb phrase, sometimes a noun phrase, but never an adjective phrase. In short, Use hands-on as an adjective, not hands on.

  5. adjective. 1. characterized by or involved in active personal participation in an activity; individual and direct. a workshop to give children hands-on experience with computers. 2. requiring manual operation, control, adjustment, or the like; not automatic or computerized.

  6. Definition of hands-on adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. Hands-on definition: characterized by or involved in active personal participation in an activity; individual and direct. See examples of HANDS-ON used in a sentence.

  8. hands-on (handz′ on′, -ôn′ ), adj. characterized by or involved in active personal participation in an activity; individual and direct: a workshop to give children hands-on experience with computers. requiring manual operation, control, adjustment, or the like;

  9. Something that's hands-on requires direct interaction or participation. If you have hands-on coffee shop experience, it means you've actually made lattes and served scones with your own two hands.

  10. hands-on. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English ˈhands-on adjective [ usually before noun] doing something yourself rather than just talking about it or telling other people to do it a chance to get some hands-on experience of the job He has a very hands-on approach to management.