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I seem to be hearing about more and more people going on "Annual Leave", is this in someway different from "going on holiday"?
I feel like I'm missing out cos I just have holidays, is "Annual Leave" better? Does one have to be much more important to get "Annual Leave"?
Sorry for the pointless post, it was just something I was contemplating whilst having my Daily Period of Rest, Relaxation, Recuperation & Rehydration (coffee break).
probably more apt as sometimes we have a day off but don't go on holiday.
You didn't really think about this very hard did you?
Sure it isn't "An[s]nu[/s]al leave" for people that are always arsin about ?
probably more apt as sometimes we have a day off but don't go on holiday.
Holiday from work doesn't necessarily mean going away...
I use some of my annual leave to go on holiday, but sometimes i use my collected statutory leave aswell.
collected statutory leave
Oh lord, it gets worse! Is this the inexorable march of the middle manager?
I think "annual leave" is a step above "going on holiday". It needs to be an active/lifestyle break though to count as annual leave (I think coasteering is an essential ingredient). A week in Skegness does not qualify.
"Taking a week off" is a step down from both though as it implies you will be at home all sad and lonely - or worse, doing DIY.
Holiday from work doesn't necessarily mean going away...
and taking a day off to paint the house or something equally dull is not any kind of holiday
It conjours images of palid wage-slaves, being ordered reluctantly to leave their desks by their managers before they burn out.
Can we not revert to "holiday"? Sounds far more fun than an enforced embargo.
Sometimes I'm on a worksmart day too...
What about if you go on vacation?
I caught myself writing "annual leave" on my Out Of Office message a couple of weeks ago. Fortunately, I caught myself in time and thus narrowly avoided disaster.
Those in the corporate world pretty much all use annual leave. Foreign colleagues tend to go on vacations not holidays anyway.
I caught myself writing "annual leave" on my Out Of Office message a couple of weeks ago. Fortunately, I caught myself in time and thus narrowly avoided disaster.
I failed to catch myself making this very error.
Shit.
What about if you go on vacation?
You mean "vacationing"?
[i]*shudder*[/i]
I seem to be hearing about more and more people going on "Annual Leave", is this in someway different from "going on holiday"?
Yes. You can have leave off work but not actually go on holiday. You can also have statutory holidays, and you can go on holidays on those without taking any annual leave. Clear?
It's called annual leave because it's taken from your annual allowance of paid leave from work, but it's shorter to type.
Also, in the US, holiday keeps its traditional meaning which is feast or festival days rather than going away somewhere. So Christmas, Easter etc.
tomhoward - Member
I caught myself writing "annual leave" on my Out Of Office message a couple of weeks ago. Fortunately, I caught myself in time and thus narrowly avoided disaster.
I failed to catch myself making this very error.
Shit.
POSTED 2 MINUTES AGO # REPORT-POST
Out of Office.... Balls, knew there was something i forgot!
I might take a TOIL day later this week, or I might take an annual leave day, not sure yet. Not a holiday though.
Are we discussing the difference between "taking a holiday" and "going on holiday"?
In any case, very few of mine are taken on Holy Days so annual leave works as being more secular.
What about just having a day off, is that ok?
In other news squadies are now being granted holidays from their soldiering jobs...
I saved this off here about 3 years ago!
[i]You're going on your hols mate. You dress it up whatever colour you like, but at the end of the day, you and I both know you're going to go spend a fortnight sitting on a sunlounger, wearing the same pair of board shorts and drinking San Miguel til your head hurts.
Or are you now too important to have a "Holiday"?[/i]
Out of Office.... Balls, knew there was something i forgot!
I purposely don't bother. I like the anticipation of the torrent of venting emails when I get back from "holiday" from those lazy arsed gits who won't get up from their desk and come in to the next office to talk to me.
I also delete any unanswered email over a week old. If it hasn't risen to the top of my to do list in that time, it wasn't important. And I certainly don't look at emails when on holiday. Or outside work for that matter. 😆
Oh, it's not "the holidays", is bloody Christmas.
Can't wait to get my R&R in two weeks.
Sunlounger, boards shorts, San Miguel?
I so won't you know.
Wait till you enter the realms of TOIL, flexi and privilege leave 🙄
I have A/L, RDIL, TOIL, BHIL and BH. They are all different types of holiday.
If i didnt have any holydays left could I just use sick holidays instead?
Oh, it's not "the holidays", is bloody Christmas.
In the US Christmas is Christmas. The holiday season means from October or November to Christmas, because there's more than one holiday in that period.
We have "PTO" or Paid Time Off.....
I always say I'm going on holiday.......
Can you now have a Holiday that is/was so [url= http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=sick ]sick[/url] ,that you could call it sick leave ?
Also, in the US, holiday keeps its traditional meaning which is feast or festival days rather than going away somewhere. So Christmas, Easter etc.
We're in England. We have holidays. Holidays from work, holidays in the sun, Bank Holidays, Public Holidays, religious holidays, jolly holidays, etc, etc, etc.
When someone tells me they've been on annual leave, I die a little inside.
When someone tells me they've been off on holiday, I ask if they've done anything nice; been anywhere interesting. I know it's only semantics, and they may well tell me about a fortnight sweating in the same board shorts drinking gassy Spanish lager, but one is frigid management speak, and the other sounds nice and fun and invites questions. So I'm going to stick with "holidays".
I know it's only semantics
So why get your knickers in a twist and start a thread about it then? 🙂
So why get your knickers in a twist and start a thread about it then?
He/she may be related to Molgrips 😉
what he said. If I'm doing something nice I'm having "a holiday" or "a day off", if it's something boring or none of your business it's "annual leave".and taking a day off to paint the house or something equally dull is not any kind of holiday
Am I a big hitter yet?
I don't know ,how's the diet going ?
🙂
So why get your knickers in a twist and start a thread about it then?
I'll be sure to check with you whether a subject is threadworthy in future... 🙄
It's called annual leave because it's taken from your annual allowance of paid leave from work, but it's shorter to type.
You know what's even shorter? "Leave." What business is it of anyone else whether it's annual or not? Moreover, who cares?
"I'm on leave, I'll be back on [date]" is all you need, anything else is just your fingers bouncing up and down on those little letters.
[quote=molgrips ]Am I a big hitter yet?
Cynic-al and I were discussing the BHL (Big Hitter List) on Saturday. He didn't mention you, so I guess not.
What business is it of anyone else whether it's annual or not? Moreover, who cares?
Who cares if you DO say annual?
And should they?
[quote=Cougar ]
It's called annual leave because it's taken from your annual allowance of paid leave from work, but it's shorter to type.
You know what's even shorter? "Leave." What business is it of anyone else whether it's annual or not? Moreover, who cares?
"I'm on leave, I'll be back on [date]" is all you need, anything else is just your fingers bouncing up and down on those little letters.
Ah - but there are other types of leave, e.g. sick leave, maternity leave, bereavement leave, parental leave.
"I'm on leave, I'll be back on [date]"
I prefer "I'm on holiday, I'll be back when I need to replenish my bank accounts or my liver can't take it any more..."
Makes me sound far more fun than some drone going on "Annual Leave" 😉
My upcoming* time away from work and my home will henecforth be described in the polite message I leave for all who enquire after my in my absence as "I've gone out. I may be some time."
*doesn't it
I'm officially on 'gardening leave'
I did put so much on my out of office before they killed my access and then the humourless albinos in the IT dep't changed it to simply unavailable.
I'm on annual leave as we speak, as my Out Of Office notifier proclaims. 😳 What gets my goat is that I have to log it on our stupid electronic timesheet system as "Vacation". 👿
kudos - Member
I seem to be hearing about more and more people going on "Annual Leave", is this in someway different from "going on holiday"?I feel like I'm missing out cos I just have holidays, is "Annual Leave" better? Does one have to be much more important to get "Annual Leave"?
Sorry for the pointless post, it was just something I was contemplating whilst having my Daily Period of Rest, Relaxation, Recuperation & Rehydration (coffee break).
I always call it annual leave because it is called annual leave....
Ah - but there are other types of leave, e.g. sick leave, maternity leave, bereavement leave, parental leave.
Sure. So? What business is it of everyone who emails me to know what I'm up to and why?
I'm having a duvet day, anyone care to join me 😉
I say annual leave because I haven't had a holiday in five years but I get asked where I am going if I tell someone that I am holiday next week.
Go on holiday. Everyone's a winner.
Actually I don't even put "holiday" on my out of office I tend to put "Away from work" I know its longer but I know it yanks the HR Dept's chain as its not fully compliant with their corporate world.
Though a work colleague did get into trouble for putting,
[i]"If you want me I'm not here for the next 2 weeks, I shall be tazzing round the twistys of the Picos mountains on my motorbike & supping a few ales in the evening. So tough luck 😉 "[/i]
Hollybobs, innit
8)
I get X number of days of annual leave. I get to take them off singly or in various numbers, but what I do with those days leave is entirely up to me.
I had a week of my 'annual leave' last week. One day I stayed at home, fannying around, one I used to go get my hair cut*, the rest I went to various places.
Simple, n'est pas?
*Woman who cuts it is in Bath, doesn't do Saturdays any more.
