The word sabbatical has appeared in 72 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year, including on April 10 in “To Escape the Grind, Young People Turn to ‘Mini-Retirements’” by Isabella Kwai:
Now, many younger workers are opting not to wait until retirement, and are leaving an extended gap between jobs to invest in other parts of their life. But not everyone wants to call it a sabbatical: Some people prefer the term “mini-retirement” or “micro-retirement.”
“Sabbaticals are seen as the thing that an organization offers to you for paid time off, and then you come back to that job,” said Kira Schabram, an assistant professor at the University of Washington who is researching such breaks. “People are just taking it into their own hands.”
Daily Word Challenge
Can you correctly use the word sabbatical in a sentence?
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