to farm out

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ostap77

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If I didn't want to do the dishes, could I say I'm framing out doing the dishes to my brother?
 
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It dosn't sound very natural to me.
 
How would you use 'to farm out' in context?
 
The company has farmed out many of its services to outside companies.
 
Can I farm out things I don't wan to do to other people?
 
Can I farm out things I don't wan to do to other people?
Yes, but I wouldn't use it for a one time activity, as in your dishes example. I suppose it's similar to outsourcing. It's part of a contract. If
doing the dishes was your regular chore, and you arranged for your brother to do it in future in exchange for a small allowance, you could almost use the term in fun. If your job was mowing the lawn, you could farm that out to a lawn mowing service. But I wouldn't use the term for doing that a single time. You could farm out your school assignments to a web-based homework-doing service.
 
I think "farm out" is the older usage. More contemporary is "outsource."

In terms of connotation "outsource" is far more international. In the gentler times of a few decades ago, firms might "farm out" some function to a more specialized local firm. Nowadays, when firms outsource a function, they typically send it a long way away, very often to India.
 
And it is mostly done for economic reasons (cheaper workforce).
 
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