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busman's holiday
noun
a vacation or day off from work spent in an activity closely resembling one's work, as a bus driver taking a long drive.
busman's holiday
/ ˈʌəԳ /
noun
informala holiday spent doing the same sort of thing as one does at work
busman's holiday
A vacation during which a person engages in activity that is the same as or similar to his or her usual employment: “Our Spanish professor had a busman's holiday this year; she spent her entire vacation doing research in Spain.”
Word History and Origins
Origin of busman's holiday1
Word History and Origins
Origin of busman's holiday1
Idioms and Phrases
Example Sentences
“In a way, we’re living Halloween every day, so painting my daughter’s face was really a bit of a busman’s holiday,” Barrie Gower says with a laugh.
O’Connor plucked this Prince song from an album by his busman’s holiday the Family — the Purple One didn’t even design to release it on his own — and turned it into an uncommonly somber torch song.
He was otherwise so absorbed in work — he was looking over early proofs of a Cynthia Ozick book while counting contractions for his pregnant wife — that the author Thomas Mallon summed up his life as a “busman’s holiday without any brakes.”
And yet, these charming pieces represent not work for hire so much as a kind of busman’s holiday, in which the author could let down his guard.
Sequestered with his family for 18 months in their 1955 cabin in Esopus, New York, he embarked on a long busman’s holiday.
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