From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishnon-traditionalˌnon-traˈditional adjective [only before noun] different from the way something happened or from what was considered typical in the past older, non-traditional university students non-traditional workdays
Examples from the Corpus
non-traditional• The same Exeter University study found that four of the 10 farms it looked at were making losses on their non-traditional businesses.• Although, as money runs out, the cost-effectiveness of non-traditional classes comes under greater scrutiny.• Audrey aspires to goals in both traditional and non-traditional domains but succeeds in the traditional domain only.• Some of that is changing as more women move into non-traditional fields.• She said the newer, non-traditional flags outsell country and state flags by more than 50 percent.• Question Seven: Are women and men shown in a variety of occupations, including non-traditional ones?• This growth he put down to the general improvement in bookshop presentation and the wider availability of books in non-traditional outlets.• Within it there is some discussion of the relative performance of students with traditional and non-traditional qualifications.