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1 Post By Ann1977 -
2 Post By PROESL -
2 Post By Ann1977
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days off work
Hello,
you can say I too a few days off work.
My question is if you can use any word instead of work?
So if I work in a school, office, hospital can I say:
I took two days off school, hospital, office etc.
Thank you.
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Re: days off work

Originally Posted by
Encolpius
Hello,
you can say I too a few days off work.
My question is if you can use any word instead of work?
So if I work in a school, office, hospital can I say:
I took two days off school, hospital, office etc.
Thank you.
I don't think any of these others would be used.
- I took two days off from school.
- I took two days off from housework.
- I had two days off from/shopping/exercising/jogging/listening to the boss.
- I had a few days off from the office/from the hospital.
- I had two days off from the Army/from the shop/from the garage.
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Re: days off work
Great examples, Ann.
- take XXX days off from ...
- have XXX days off from ...
Do these mean the same thing?
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Re: days off work

Originally Posted by
Daruma
Great examples, Ann.
- take XXX days off from ...
- have XXX days off from ...
Do these mean the same thing?
For practical purposes, they're likely interchangeable most of the time. Here's the difference in meaning:
We have ten days off from work in August. - This is simply an acknowledgement that the speakers have ten days off in August.
We're taking ten days off from work in August. - This means that the speakers are not just acknowledging that they have ten days off, but that they somehow had a hand in the decision making: 1. They asked the manager if they could use ten vacation days in August. 2. They're self-employed and have decided to take tens days off in August. And who knows what other way they could explain the days off? The point is that they had a hand in making the decision in some way. It could've been a request, a choice, or their decision completely.
Last edited by PROESL; 25-Sep-2009 at 04:12.
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Re: days off work
That's right. You don't "choose" to HAVE some time off work -- you decide to TAKE some time off.
"Why are you home today?"
- "Oh, I decided to take a couple of days off from school."
- "I thought I'd take a couple of days off."
- "I wanted to take a few days off from studying."
(I took the time off as my own decision.)
BUT:
- "We always have the day after Thanksgiving off."
- "We get the day after Thanksgiving off every year."
- "The school always lets us have the day after Thanksgiving off."
(This time off was granted.)
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