The difference between Casual and Occasional

When used as adjectives, casual means happening by chance, whereas occasional means occurring or appearing irregularly from time to time, but not often.


Casual is also noun with the meaning: a worker who is only working for a company occasionally, not as its permanent employee.

check bellow for the other definitions of Casual and Occasional

  1. Casual as an adjective:

    Happening by chance.

    Examples:

    "They only had casual meetings."

  2. Casual as an adjective:

    Coming without regularity; occasional or incidental.

    Examples:

    "The purchase of donuts was just a casual expense."

  3. Casual as an adjective:

    Employed irregularly.

    Examples:

    "He was just a casual worker."

  4. Casual as an adjective:

    Careless.

  5. Casual as an adjective:

    Happening or coming to pass without design.

  6. Casual as an adjective:

    Informal, relaxed.

  7. Casual as an adjective:

    Designed for informal or everyday use.

  1. Casual as a noun (British, Australian, NZ):

    A worker who is only working for a company occasionally, not as its permanent employee.

  2. Casual as a noun:

    A soldier temporarily at a place of duty, usually en route to another place of duty.

  3. Casual as a noun (UK):

    A member of a group of football hooligans who wear expensive designer clothing to avoid police attention; see .

  4. Casual as a noun:

    One who receives relief for a night in a parish to which he does not belong; a vagrant.

  5. Casual as a noun (video games, informal, derogatory):

    A player of casual games.

    Examples:

    "usex The devs dumbed the game down so the casuals could enjoy it."

  6. Casual as a noun (British):

    (dated) A tramp.

  1. Occasional as an adjective:

    Occurring or appearing irregularly from time to time, but not often.

    Examples:

    "He was mostly solitary, but enjoyed the occasional visitor."

    "He took an occasional glass of wine."

  2. Occasional as an adjective:

    Created for a specific occasion.

    Examples:

    "Elgar's music was not created to be occasional music for high-school graduations."

  3. Occasional as an adjective:

    Intended for use as the occasion requires.

    Examples:

    "What your living room needs are some occasional chairs."

  4. Occasional as an adjective:

    Acting in the indicated role from time to time.

    Examples:

    "He is an occasional contributor to letters to the editor."