furlough 1 of 2

as in dismissal
the termination of the employment of an employee or a work force often temporarily the landscaping company usually has to put most of its personnel on furlough during the extremely slow winter months

Synonyms & Similar Words

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Antonyms & Near Antonyms

furlough

2 of 2

verb

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of furlough
Noun
Institutions lost billions of dollars in revenue, most of them were forced to enact large budget cuts, furlough or lay off staff and faculty, and shutter academic programs. Michael T. Nietzel, Forbes.com, 18 May 2025 Hiring freezes, furloughs and layoffs may seem dramatic for a city that only a few short years ago had 16% fiscal reserves, but taking action today will forestall more dramatic cuts should the economy take a turn for the worse. The Denver Post Editorial Board, Denver Post, 23 May 2025
Verb
During a shutdown, hundreds of thousands of federal workers, those deemed nonessential, are furloughed, or sent home without pay. George Petras, USA TODAY, 14 Mar. 2025 Two of the Triangle's largest nonprofit research institutes have furloughed hundreds of staff members after the Trump Administration's cuts affected their contracts with the U.S. Agency for International Development. Zachery Eanes, Axios, 11 Mar. 2025 See All Example Sentences for furlough
Recent Examples of Synonyms for furlough
Noun
  • But the main disagreement with them is not in their correct dismissal of deregulation as the cause of the carnage, but in their ongoing support of government intervention, including bailouts.
    John Tamny, Forbes.com, 18 June 2025
  • The union representing most of the agency’s employees sued, winning a preliminary injunction to halt the dismissals.
    Benjamin Wallace-Wells, New Yorker, 16 June 2025
Verb
  • Over the past few months, my wife has begun drinking to excess every evening.
    Amy Dickinson, Washington Post, 17 July 2023
  • Over the past few months my wife has begun drinking to excess every evening.
    Amy Dickinson, Anchorage Daily News, 17 July 2023
Verb
  • The graduate is not only bummed about the sister’s absence.
    Brian Anthony Hernandez, People.com, 25 May 2025
  • Everyone — from those actually paying to the ones still bumming a log-in — wants to know how Netflix and other streaming services’ crackdowns on password sharing affect them.
    Savannah Salazar, Vulture, 20 May 2025
Noun
  • Immigration advocates now say the Trump administration's hiring and firing decisions could threaten the crucial neutrality of the administrative courts.
    Ximena Bustillo, NPR, 6 June 2025
  • The firings and slashed funding impacted organizations like Sacramento’s Improve Your Tomorrow, which mentors young men of color and prepares them for higher education and joining the workforce.
    Molly Gibbs, Sacbee.com, 6 June 2025
Verb
  • In December 2021, the company abruptly laid off 900 employees via a Zoom call, and the CEO's delivery was widely criticized as insensitive.
    Tony Butler-Sims, Forbes.com, 20 June 2025
  • Thousands of private government consultants laid off during the Trump administration’s cost-cutting crusade are increasingly flooding a shrinking labor market.
    Ani Freedman, Fortune, 20 June 2025
Verb
  • The entire day felt dehumanizing, as if her nearly eight years with the company, her medical problems and her physical pain had been reduced to nothing more than malingering and scattered incidents of tardiness.
    Greg Jaffe, Anchorage Daily News, 18 June 2023
  • Goldstein, who did not return a message seeking comment, practices in Chicago and has lectured on the topic of malingering, according to a resume posted online.
    Matt Hamilton, Los Angeles Times, 12 June 2023
Noun
  • New jobless claims, a proxy for layoffs, fell to 7,903 in the week ending May 31, down from 8,815 the week before, the Labor Department said.
    USA TODAY, USA Today, 13 June 2025
  • Vox Media, like many other media companies, has implemented multiple rounds of layoffs in recent years, most recently with a third wave of job cuts in January within a brief succession of weeks.
    Todd Spangler, Variety, 13 June 2025
Verb
  • That new boom idled for a decade until Vladimir Putin created a commodities frenzy by invading Ukraine, one of the world’s most important ag exporters.
    Edward Lotterman, Twin Cities, 15 June 2025
  • Port roads jammed with diesel trucks, oil refineries processing fuel, ships idling to be unloaded, make for some of the worst air in the state.
    Patt Morrison, Los Angeles Times, 24 May 2025

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Cite this Entry

“Furlough.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/furlough. Accessed 25 Jun. 2025.

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