job-sharing
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++ˈjob-ˌsharing noun [uncountable] BECan arrangement by which two people both work part-time doing the same job 职位分担[分享] —jobshare /ˈdʒɒbʃeə $ ˈdʒɑːbʃer/ noun [countable] —jobshare verb [intransitive]
Examples from the Corpus
job-sharing• Posts which can not be filled should be considered as to their suitability for a job-sharing arrangement.• A job-sharing policy should be devised in conjunction with staff organisations.• In either instance the posts suitable for job-sharing should be identified.• Full-time staff are being asked if they would like to switch to part-time work and various initiatives including job-sharing are being encouraged.From Longman Business Dictionaryjob sharingˈjob ˌsharing noun [uncountable]HUMAN RESOURCES when two people share one full-time job, dividing the hours and work between themWhat is your company’s policy on job sharing?a job-sharing scheme —job share verb [intransitive]We have job shared for two years now. —job share noun [countable]women working in job sharesˈjob-ˌsharing nounChineseSyllable
Business people Corpus both two which part-time by work arrangement an doing
job-sharing
ˈjob-ˌsharing
noun [uncountable]
an arrangement by which two people both work part-time doing the same job
—jobshare /ˈdʒɒbʃeə $ ˈdʒɑːbʃer/ noun [countable]
—jobshare verb [intransitive]
ˈjob-ˌsharing
noun [uncountable]an arrangement by which two people both work part-time doing the same job
—jobshare /ˈdʒɒbʃeə $ ˈdʒɑːbʃer/ noun [countable]
—jobshare verb [intransitive]