Leisure time is time not spent on compulsory activities, like employment, education, running a business and household chores, or on regular sleeping. The distinction is not strict, since necessity can be larger or smaller, and things may be done for pleasure as well as longer term usefulness.
This time can be spent on two main kinds of leisure:
Active leisure: active recreation, leisure sport (going to the gym, etc.; sport for fun rather than for competition). This type of leisure rarely leads to boredom.
Lounging, "doing nothing": the kind of "reclining-in-the-sun" type leisure, which implies going to sleep or a near-sleep lounging state. It could be called "wasting time". Lounging that is not enjoyable can lead to boredom. Some moral codes frown upon this type of leisure, while others celebrate it, as in the British magazine The Idler.
Sport fishing may fall in both categories, depending on how active one is.
Some types of leisure have recently been described as quality time.
See also: Leisure Thermal Comfort
External link
The Idler magazine (http://www.idler.co.uk/)
Workaholism and leisure in modern society (http://samvak.tripod.com/leisure.html)
The time signature (also known as "meter signature") is a notational device used in Western musical notation to specify how many beats are in each bar and what note value constitutes one beat.
In this case the time signatures are an aid to the performers, not an indication of meter.
Sometimes the word FREE is written downwards on the stave to indicate the piece is in freetime.
Yet under consumer capitalism this time is cleverly commandeered for other means as intrinsic to keeping the machine running as the activities engaged in under the watchful eye of the clock.
The spectacle holds workers in thrall, teaching them in what is called their "free"time that their desires can be satisfied through consumption.
Time (because of work, consumption and consumer training), playfulness (because of an obsolete work ethic), and desires divorced from commodities have been lost under the present system.