Thesaurus Dictionary
Synonyms and antonyms of Types of job or work in British Thesaurus
Types of job or work
calling (noun)
formal a job or profession, especially one that you consider important
child labour (noun)
the employment of children, especially children who are legally too young to work
consultancy (noun)
the work of a consultancy company
liaison (noun)
the job of exchanging information about the work of an organization with people who are affected by it
mission (noun)
an important piece of work that a person or group of people has to do for a government or large organization, especially one that involves travel
moonlighting (noun)
informal the activity of working at a second job in the evenings or at weekends without telling the tax authorities
paper round (noun)
British the job of delivering newspapers to a group of homes, or the group of homes that someone has to deliver newspapers to
paper route (noun)
American a paper round
pink-collar (adjective)
informal pink-collar workers do work with low pay that is traditionally done by women, especially young women. Some people find this expression offensive
project (noun)
a planned piece of work that has a particular aim, especially one that is organized by a government, company, or other organization
project (noun)
a piece of work that involves collecting detailed information about something
secondment (noun)
British a period when you are sent by your employer to work for a different organization or a different part of your organization
teleworking (noun)
the activity of working at home on a computer and communicating with an office or customers by telephone, fax, or email
work experience (noun)
educationBritish a period of time that someone, especially a school student, spends working somewhere in order to get experience of a particular type of job
zero-hours contract (noun)
British an employment agreement in which a person only works when the employer needs them and so has no regular or guaranteed amount of work or working hours