Definition, Meaning & Anagrams | English word CARRYOVER


CARRYOVER

Definitions of CARRYOVER

  1. Something whose duration has been extended or that has been transferred to another time.
  2. An amount, especially a sum of money, transferred to a new column in a ledger, or applied to a later time.
  3. The damaging condition where water droplets are carried out of a steam boiler along with the dry steam.

1

Number of letters

9

Is palindrome

No

14
AR
ARR
CA
CAR
ER
OV
RR
RYO
VE
VER
YO

1

1

369
AC
ACE
ACR
ACV
AE
AEC
AEO
AER

Examples of Using CARRYOVER in a Sentence

  • The term commonly used in the radio industry for these ratings is Arbitron book, a carryover from the era when ratings were published in a softcover report that was mailed to clients.
  • Compared to the Volvo Amazon, the 140 was a radical departure with minimal exterior and interior carryover, notably a stylised version of the front split grille.
  • Other notable series during the block's WB run included Animaniacs (a Fox Kids carryover) and spinoff Pinky and the Brain (which began as a WB prime time series), Freakazoid!, The New Batman/Superman Adventures, Histeria!, Cardcaptors, Yu-Gi-Oh!, Jackie Chan Adventures, Static Shock and Johnny Test.
  • This unbridgeable gap found within the science of reason was, in his view, a carryover from everyday, phenomenal, unphilosophical consciousness.
  • Due to its volatility, it acts as an oxygen scavenger throughout the entire boiler system due to steam carryover.
  • The taillights were particularly fashioned after the Lincoln's, and the trunk lid was given a faux brightwork "grille" overlay (to hide the grooves of the otherwise carryover 1956–61 lid) that resembled the Lincoln as well.
  • Along with further reinforcement of the bodyshell, the powertrain was relocated further forward in the chassis (though wheelbases remained carryover), requiring a longer hood and front fenders.
  • There are two types of coarticulation: anticipatory coarticulation, when a feature or characteristic of a speech sound is anticipated (assumed) during the production of a preceding speech sound; and carryover or perseverative coarticulation, when the effects of a sound are seen during the production of sound(s) that follow.
  • He made three arguments for how this allegedly happened, none of which had any merit: contamination from the reagents used for amplification; cross-contamination from the reference vials to the dna extraction product and contamination from PCR carryover amplification.
  • Set in large chromed housings, they were mounted to the carryover quarter panels and imparted a Dodge familial appearance to the rear, as one of Dodge's styling hallmarks of the time was round taillights.
  • Veni Sancte Spiritus is one of only four medieval sequences which were incorporated into the Liturgy of the Roman Curia – a Roman carryover from the pre-Tridentine Mass celebrated before the standardisations by the Council of Trent (1545–63).
  • In addition, the high gas velocities necessitate the use of entrainment separators to prevent excessive liquid carryover.
  • The impurity carryover can cause corrosion and fouling of steam turbines, reheaters, and superheaters.
  • In 2010, KPI called attention to the State Unencumbered Fund balances, concluding that state school districts had over $699 million in carryover operating funds.
  • Plans may also feature an efficiency carryover mechanism that incentivizes long term performance gains and discourages the opportunistic timing of expenses by permitting the utility to keep a share of cost savings (or absorb a share of high costs) when rates are trued up to cost at the end of the plan.



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