different between retrenchment vs layoff
retrenchment
English
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /???t??n(t)?m(?)nt/
- (General American) IPA(key): /???t??n(t)?m(?)nt/, [?i-]
- Hyphenation: re?trench?ment
Etymology 1
Probably partly from both of the following:
- Middle French retrenchement, retranchement (“removal of a portion from a larger whole; reduction of expenses”) (modern French retranchement (“deduction, subtraction”)), from retrancher, retranchier (“to get rid of, remove completely; to remove a portion from a larger whole; to reduce expenses; to deprive (oneself) of”) [and other forms] + -ment (suffix forming nouns usually of an action or a state resulting from an action). Retrancher and retranchier are derived from Old French re- (prefix meaning ‘again, once more’) + tranchier, trenchier (“to cut”) [and other forms] (modern French trancher (“to slice”)); the further etymology is uncertain, but one possibility is that the Old French words are from Latin trunc?re, the present active infinitive of trunc? (“to mutilate by cutting off pieces; to truncate”), from truncus (“tree trunk; piece cut off”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *twer?- (“to carve; to cut off, trim”).
- retrench (“to cut down, reduce; to reduce expenses; to make (an employee) redundant”) +? -ment. Retrench is derived from Middle French retrancher, retranchier: see above.
Noun
retrenchment (countable and uncountable, plural retrenchments)
- A curtailment or reduction.
- Synonyms: cutting down, diminution, lessening
- (specifically) An act of reducing expenses; economizing.
- Synonym: cutback
- (specifically) An act of terminating the employment of a worker or making an employee redundant, often to reduce expenses; a layoff.
Usage notes
Sense 1.2 (“act of terminating the employment of a worker”) is common in countries like Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and South Africa, but uncommon in Britain and the United States.
Translations
Etymology 2
Probably either from:
- Middle French retranchement (“defensive work”) (modern French retranchement (“entrenchment”)), from re- (prefix meaning ‘again, once more’) + tranche (“trench”) + -ment (suffix forming nouns usually of an action or a state resulting from an action); or
- retrench (“to construct one or more retrenchments; to protect using retrenchments; to fortify”) +? -ment. Retrench is probably derived from Middle French retrancher, retranchier (“to fortify with trenches and banks”), from Old French re- + tranchier, trenchier (“to cut”); see further at etymology 1.
Noun
retrenchment (plural retrenchments)
- (military, dated) A defensive work constructed within a fortification to make it more defensible by allowing defenders to retreat into and fight from it even after the enemy has taken the outer work.
Translations
References
Further reading
- layoff on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- retrenchment on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- retrenchment (military) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- retrenchment (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
retrenchment From the web:
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layoff
English
Etymology
From the verb phrase lay off.
Noun
layoff (plural layoffs)
- (chiefly US) A dismissal of employees from their jobs because of tightened budgetary constraints or work shortage (not due to poor performance or misconduct).
- A period of time when someone is unavailable for work.
- (Britain, soccer) A short pass that has been rolled in front of another player for them to kick.
- A bet that is laid off, i.e. placed with another bookmaker in order to reduce risk.
Synonyms
- (dismissal of employees): downsizing, reduction in force, redundancy
Translations
See also
- lay off
Further reading
- layoff on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
- Offaly, offlay
layoff From the web:
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