What Jewish connotations?
The religious origin comes from Greek "of the Sabbath" - you are getting your Greek mixed up with the Hebrew "Sabbath" - used by a large number of Xhristians for Sunday - the Hebrew Sabbath is a Friday evening to saturday evening.
Precisely, the religious connotation has everything to do with the Jewish Shab(b)at, which was translated as 'Sabbath' in Greek. Very few Christians refer to Sunday as the Sabbath. As you say, the Jewish Sabbath occurs every 7 days (Friday 6pm to Saturday 6pm in English terminology). As for your rather naff attempt to misspell 'Christian', the Greek letter chi χ is often transliterated as 'ch' in English - as in Χάος. You've effectively spelt it Chhristian!!
The more usual meaning is an academic one in that it refers to a period of paid study leave given to university professors.
Actually, the usual meaning is far broader than academia.
Oh bloody Hell I can't even make an honest typo now - X is next to C on the bloody keyboard you arrant arse!
The dictionary definition - Oxford English specifies academia!
But I forgot - as I have pointed out before no-one must argue with Hope he knows absolutely every-bloody-thing!
I have, really I have, tried to look at the world from your point of view, but I am physically incapable of getting my head that far up my own arse!
Goodbye Hope - we will not talk again!
Don't be too hard on Hope it's a very common complaint that most teachers seem to acquire.
I have had to deal with all sorts of people in my professional career from millionaires to Joe Bloggs that drives a roadside drain cleaning bowser, it can be a pain, it can be very interesting and you do get to notice the behavioural trends of those doing various types of jobs or professions.
On passing their final exams and becoming qualified teachers, a large number of them, suddenly think that they have by coincidence acquired all of the knowledge in the whole of the universe and this happened to them on the same day they qualified.
Another thing very common to the teaching profession is that their homes are either extremely tidy but a lot more often you can't sit down because of the stuff all over the seats and you can't clear a seat to sit down because there is nowhere to put the the stuff you would like to remove from the cluttered seat so that you can sit down and there's very few fit between the tidy or the tip preference.
I know this post of mine does sound a bit strange but I do assure you this has also surprised me over the past 45 years of my working life how true to form these living habits of teachers are.
ippy
Good grief!! How many teacher's homes have you been in? Or is it just another wild and unsubstantiated generalisation?
No B A, it's not an unsubstantiated generalisation, it's first hand experience of must be at least a couple of hundred teachers or there abouts.
ippy
I suggest that is an exaggeration, or worse! You must think people on here are very easily persuaded. I'll warrant you couldn't name even half a dozen teachers whose homes you have been in.. I worked all my life as a teacher, and could only name a handful whose living conditions I was au fait with. Are you prepared to revise your assertion, or perhaps substantiate it?
Just passing on something I have seen with my own eyes, do you make a daily record, say in a book, of everything that you find amusing, no, well likewise.
If you think I'm lying fine, not much I can do about it.
ippy
It's so easy to make an outlandish claim, then provide no verifiable evidence. (!!) Your original claim is clearly arrant nonsense. How many teachers are there in UK? There are 451,100 full-time-equivalent teachers: (Sean Coughlan, on BBC News.) Of those, how many are you privy to their personal circumstances? Your comment looks more and more asinine!
You can be a bit of a tit at times B A, I suppose I'll have to brace myself for a barrage of insults now, but I have...
ippy
Listen, ippy, if you can't provide some decent evidence for your sweeping claim, then you can take your colouring books and sit on the naughty step for an hour.
I am telling you exactly what I have seen over the years and I have no reason to make up a story of this kind, I have teachers in my close family and friends, I have been there in teachers houses loads of them probably somewhere in between 1 to 2 hundred homes maybe more, I wasn't counting.
If you read the things I have said I was very careful to state exactly the things I have observed without any embellishments.
A large number of teachers I have had dealings with live in a mess, not usually a dirty mess, or are extremely tidy and there seems to be very little in between.
Noel would be a good name for most teachers, the males of course, perhaps Noela for the women teachers, I don't know why but the large majority of teachers suffer with this, I have the combined knowledge of the whole universe here in my head, complaint, (note I specifically didn't say all teachers), certainly the largest amount of them.
ippy