-
infraction vs violation vs offense
Hello,
Here is a sentence from the article 'Why the Boss Can Steal Paper Clips, But You Better Not' by Kimberly Weisul on Bnet:
'The test subjects were then presented with a list of possible infractions, ranging in severity from using company stamps for personal mail to verbally abusing a co-worker, and then asked how strongly each “Dave” should be sanctioned.'
I am curious about the word 'infraction'. Is it used mainly in relation to rules of ethics in a company? Can it be changed for 'violation' or 'offense'?
Here are more examples from the article:
The big-shot was punished more severely for more serious infractions, such as withholding important work-related information from colleagues, verbally abusing a co-worker, or taking large kickbacks.
There is more likely to be a disparity in the punishment if the offense is against the corporation versus against an individual employee.
Why a sudden change of heart, and 'offense' is used instead of 'infraction'?
Thank you very much in advance.
-
Re: infraction vs violation vs offense

Originally Posted by
vectra
Hello,
Here is a sentence from the article 'Why the Boss Can Steal Paper Clips, But You Better Not' by Kimberly Weisul on Bnet:
'The test subjects were then presented with a list of possible infractions, ranging in severity from using company stamps for personal mail to verbally abusing a co-worker, and then asked how strongly each “Dave” should be sanctioned.'
I am curious about the word 'infraction'. Is it used mainly in relation to rules of ethics in a company? Can it be changed for 'violation' or 'offense'?
Here are more examples from the article:
The big-shot was punished more severely for more serious infractions, such as withholding important work-related information from colleagues, verbally abusing a co-worker, or taking large kickbacks.
There is more likely to be a disparity in the punishment if the offense is against the corporation versus against an individual employee.
Why a sudden change of heart, and 'offense' is used instead of 'infraction'?
Thank you very much in advance.
NOT A TEACHER.
Without looking up the words, I'd say that "offense" and "violation" have, more or less, the same meaning. "Violation" does sound stronger, though. An infraction is a minor offense.
Similar Threads
-
By marieuni in forum Ask a Teacher
Replies: 5
Last Post: 23-Dec-2008, 09:30
-
By kiranlegend in forum Ask a Teacher
Replies: 5
Last Post: 08-Dec-2008, 20:23
-
By nepjaja in forum Ask a Teacher
Replies: 1
Last Post: 14-May-2007, 05:57
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules

Search Engine Optimization by
vBSEO 3.6.1