non-work

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

non-work (countable and uncountable, plural non-works)

  1. Alternative form of nonwork
    • 2000, Mark Kirby, Sociology in Perspective, page G-280:
      A consideration of some of the issues surrounding the definition of work therefore leads to the identification of a number of different ways in which it is possible to define work, and by extension, non-work.
    • 2001, Frank S. Bloch, Rienk Prins, Who Returns to Work & Why?, page 166:
      Certainly, all those who qualified for a disability benefit worked less. Of the vocational and other non-medical interventions covered by this study, this process was found to be the most significant indicator for non-work at the end of the follow-up period.
    • 2003, Marc J. Schabracq, Jacques A. M. Winnubst, Cary Cooper, The Handbook of Work and Health Psychology, page 283:
      Greenhaus & Beutell (1985) were one of the first to define work/non-work conflict, whereby non-work was interpreted in terms of “family” (and therefore excluding responsibilities and activities beyond the immediate family).
    • 2006, Clive Scott, Translating Rimbaud's Illuminations, page 138:
      If an artist, in creating works, implies infinite non-works (i.e. work produced cannot replace other possible works and in fact prevents them), but is an obstacle to their development thanks to the limitations of his personality, then the single artist must be removed and all possible artists must have access to the project, as must, therefore, all possible arts.
    • 2009, Arvydas Šliogeris, The Thing and Art: Two Essays on the Ontotopy of the Work of Art:
      The relation between man and a work of art differs from the relation between man and a non-work of art.
    • 2017, Ching-i Tu, Classics and Interpretations, page 45:
      A text is a non-work, a text without significance, occupying no space in the charted terrain of discourse. In contrast, a work is a significant text, a text that has become a work when it is attached to an author or authors (proven or attributed) and is recognized as an example of a literary genre and/or an articulation of an intellectual tradition.