See also: stretch out and stretchout

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

Deverbal from stretch out.

Noun edit

stretch-out (plural stretch-outs)

  1. A practice of industrial operation, especially in the textile industry, by which workers are required to do additional work without a proportional increase in wages.
    Synonym: speedup
    Antonyms: go-slow, slowdown, work-to-rule
    • 1934 August 22, “Ways to Avert Textile Strike Come to Front”, in Chattanooga Daily Times, volume 65, number 249, Chattanooga, Tenn., page 2:
      The strike committee's statement today [] said the “stretchout system has become a scourge and the principal weapon used by the employers to beat the workers into subjection[.]” [] Of the stretch-out, the committee declared: / “We are sick and tired of listening to people tell us that there is nothing we can do about the stretch-out. []
  2. A stretch limousine.
    • 2004, Robert C. Allen, Creating Hawai'i Tourism: A Memoir, page 118:
      As time progressed, the Gray Line increased its limo fleet, converted the stretchouts into passenger vehicles (later widely emulated), and brought the first sightseeing buses to the Islands.

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