karoshi
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Japanese 過労死 (karōshi), from 過労 (karō, “overwork”) + 死 (shi, “death”). Doublet of guolaosi and gwarosa.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kəˈɹəʊʃi/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Noun
karoshi (uncountable)
- Death, such as from heart attack or stroke, brought on by overwork or job-related stress.
- 1976, Bill Henderson, The Pushcart Prize: Best of the Small Presses, Pushcart Press, page 207:
- For a while he began to speak Japanese, rather slangy, never having seemed to learn it — karoshi for death from overwork, yakitaori-ya for eatery, and gaijin for clumsy foreigner.
- 2006, Ronald J. Burke, Research Companion to Working Time and Work Addiction, page 158:
- Second, we discuss the problem of karoshi, which is unique to Japan. Karoshi has become an increasingly serious problem.
- [2007 November, Gil Schwartz, “Escape from the job monster”, in Men's Health, volume 22, number 9, →ISSN, page 120:
- […] I am a workaholic. […] The Japanese have a word for the problem: karōshi. It means “death from overwork.”]
- 2008, Tony Crabbe, Busy, Preface, at page xi:
- In Japan there is a word for the consequences of extreme busyness: karoshi, which means 'death from overwork'. Karoshi happens when chronic fatigue, stemming from long hours and persistent stress, leads to stroke and heart disease. For most of us, the results of a busyness-induced allostatic load are much less dramatic, but still pretty bad: being 'always on' has been linked to reductions in performance, reduced memory, and increased health risks of all kinds: cardiovascular disease, reduced immune system performance and an earlier death. One expert in the US approximated that 60-90 per cent of all visits to the doctor were stress related.
- 2016 November 30, Emiko Jozuka and Yoko Wakatsuki, “Death by overwork: Pressure mounts on Japan to act”, in CNN Business[1]:
- Since the 1980s, labor lawyers and citizens groups have been pushing for changes to the law to recognize karoshi as a serious social issue.
Synonyms
Translations
death from overwork
See also
- 九九六 (jiǔjiǔliù) (Chinese, literally 996; 9-to-9 workday and six-day workweek)
Anagrams
French
Etymology
Borrowed from Japanese 過労死 (karōshi).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ka.ʁɔ.ʃi/
Noun
karoshi m (uncountable)