daywork

daywork

(ˈdeɪˌwɜːk)
n
1. (Industrial Relations & HR Terms) a form of work that is calculated and paid for on a daily basis
2. (Historical Terms) history a duty to work for a certain number of days on a lord's land
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

day•work

(ˈdeɪˌwɜrk)

n.
work done and paid for by the day.
[1570–80]
day′work`er, n.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
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In the FIDIC 1999 contract, determinations only related to claims; however, in the 2017 version, the Agreement and Determination aspect of sub-clause 3.7 also applies to measurement of the works, rates and prices, variations, extension of time (EOT) and adjustments of the contract price and schedule of payments, daywork, amount to be paid for plant and materials off-site, amounts not certified in the interim payment certificate (IPC), and disagreement as to the cause of a defect.
I did this while training 4-5 days a week learning how to wrestle in hopes that I would one daywork for the WWE." The hard work and dedication paid off He worked his way up to becoming a WWE superstar and traveled the world before retiring in 2013.
For example, the standard IADC Daywork Drilling Contract form provides for the operator to be responsible for all liability arising out of the use of materials the operator supplies.
Real corrugated shuttering (daywork joints at corrugated sheet-lengths) it was.
In the adjudicators report, Wrekin's position is that they were to pay a daywork rate of pounds 315 per day.
I get to the gym or run every dayWork takes a lot of hoursORI met my wife in math camp; one struck out in band campOn Friday nights I like watching almanac ...
One was the elimination of piece work altogether in favor of a measured daywork system.
The Fifth Circuit also held that Century Offshore Management Corp., which entered into a Daywork Drilling Contract with the owner of the drilling vessel and which ordered the services, had authority to procure necessaries for the drilling vessel.
In "Daywork" two sisters simply banter while emptying the attic of their infirm mother's belongings.
Hyspa had been sent from his native Narbonne in autumn 1887 to study law in the capital, but apparently he took the matter no further than matriculation.(4) He found menial daywork and spent his evenings at the Chat Noir, writing stories and poetry for the house weekly, among other journals.