Nurses and ambulance drivers.
Some women did fight in World War 2. Some were nurses, some had desk jobs, and some were spies. Some were just women in the line of fire.
I don't know very much, but I do know that as women did a lot of men's jobs during the second world war, after the war was over, women still kept up some of their jobs.
Women and black men did many jobs during the war that had previously been done only by white men. After the war, some were able to keep their new jobs, and many were not.
Women in Australia were encouraged to join the army. Some women even fought in battle in war zones. Others worked at industrial jobs in factories and as nurses.
The women's jobs outside the factory in world war 2 were to be housewives and take care of their children and supply food on the table for themselves and their children. Some of them could've taken up sewing as a ladies job and wasn't classed as a labor job that men were usually doing to earn some money for food.
some of the jobs they had were cooking, aiding, and cleaning
One of the biggest arenas in which women were discriminated against in the United States during World War II was in the workforce. Some companies didn't want to hire women. Some hired women, but wouldn't give them jobs that were traditionally considered men's jobs. Still others hired women, but didn't want to pay them the same salary they paid men.
Some women went to the countryside ,similarly with their children, to work on farms. This was known as the women's land army.
Well when the war was going on women worked in the WAAC as nurses and radio operators. But some women worked on the ships, and helped in the making of the Atomic bomb.
No.
They did most of the jobs that the men who had been called up to serve in the forces used to do. Some women served in uniform in various capacities, including the present Queen who was Princess Elizabeth at the time.
Some have jobs, others do housework. Islam does not forbid women from having jobs.